HONG KONG: China and India have seldom shared the same views on free trade in recent years, but they ended up on the same side at the collapse of world trade talks in Geneva on Tuesday because China made an abrupt about-face.Growing worries in China about food security now appear to have overridden the country's previous commitment to free trade — a commitment that has served it well until now as the country with the world's second-largest trade surplus after Germany.Since joining the World Trade Organization in November 2001, China has been a strong and outspoken defender of free-trade principles. It has been especially critical of the United States, for example, for invoking so-called "safeguard" rules to prevent an increase of Chinese textile imports that threatened to put American manufacturers out of business.But this week, China allied itself with Indian negotiators in insisting on safeguard rules for agriculture. China and India insisted that developing countries be allowed to impose prohibitively high tariffs on food imports from affluent countries to halt increases in imports that might put farmers in poor countries out of business.The United States and other food exporters refused to accept the Chinese and Indian position on food safeguards, and talks broke down.

GENEVA: Anti-globalisation groups on Wednesday hailed the collapse of talks on a new world trade treaty as a triumph for farmers, workers and the poor around the globe and a blow against "big business."And even mainstream labour and farm groupings argued that the deal on the table at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Doha round negotiations over the past few days was so bad that it was just as well that it had been abandoned."Victory for small farmers, workers, civil society and developing nations," declared the U.S.-based Public Citizen group, which for over a decade has campaigned against the WTO and its drive to liberalise international trade."The mouldering corpse" of the round "should have been buried years ago," said its trade specialist Lori Wallach.The failure of the Geneva negotiations "is a welcome respite for poor countries" in the face of an aggressive push by the rich powers for more free trade despite the global food and fuel crisis, said the Manila-based Focus on the Global South.http://www.iht.com/articles/reuters/2008/07/30/business/OUKBS-UK-TRADE-WTO-VICTORY.php

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COLUMNIST:

Philip Bowring: Self-inflicted trade wounds

HONG KONG: The developing world has been ill-served by the three big countries - India, Brazil and China - that in effect represented them in the World Trade Organization's Doha Round negotiations that collapsed Tuesday. Just as the Geneva talks seemed on the brink of success a mix of national interests and "food security" illusions trumped concern for world trade and the interests of the majority of developing nations.High food prices should have been a catalyst for overcoming the farm trade issues that had long deadlocked Doha. But rather than demonstrate the need for fewer market distortions if output and trade is to meet global demand, the talks saw India and China reverting to the very food security arguments used in the past to justify European subsidies.In the process, Beijing and New Delhi have blocked the hopes of countries like Thailand and Malaysia and impoverished African cotton producers that the tariffs and subsidies that hurt their economies would be cut. By discouraging efficient producers from increasing output, these market distortions also raise long-term prices for developing countries that import food.

BEIJING: Flooding and poor harvests have caused North Korea's worst food crisis since the late 1990s and have put millions at risk, the United Nations's food agency said Wednesday.The food shortage threatens widespread malnutrition, the World Food Program said."Millions of vulnerable North Koreans are at risk of slipping toward precarious hunger levels," Jean-Pierre de Margerie, the WFP's country director for North Korea, told a news conference.

BERLIN: Russia has further reduced its oil deliveries to the Czech Republic, bringing total July cutbacks to 50 percent, senior Czech officials said Wednesday, a disruption that is again calling into question Russia's reliability as an energy supplier to Central and Eastern Europe.

MOSCOW: The chief executive of BP's Russian oil venture TNK-BP may face a court case over labour violations that could ultimately see him barred from running a Russian company for three years, a labour official said.

Anyone who looks at the growth of middle classes around the world and their rising demands for natural resources, plus the dangers of climate change driven by our addiction to fossil fuels, can see that clean renewable energy - wind, solar, nuclear and stuff we haven't yet invented - is going to be the next great global industry. It has to be if we are going to grow in a stable way.Therefore, the country that most owns the clean power industry is going to most own the next great technology breakthrough - the E.T. revolution, the energy technology revolution - and create millions of jobs and thousands of new businesses, just like the I.T. revolution did.

The truth is that Iraq, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon and Pakistan are just different fronts in the same war. The core problem is that the Arab-Muslim world in too many places has been failing at modernity, and were it not for $120-a-barrel oil, that failure would be even more obvious. For far too long, the region has been dominated by authoritarian politics, massive youth unemployment, outdated education systems, a religious establishment resisting reform and now a death cult that glorifies young people committing suicide.

ÉPERNAY, France: Uniformity of style is one of the depressing aspects of globalization, and nowhere more so than in the wine business. The global craving for big, fruity, caramel-laced reds, heavy on berry-filled taste but short on structure, has caused winemakers the world over to jump on the easy-drinking bandwagon.I drink Chiantis these days that have nothing to do with the wonderful, rough, tannic wine I consumed by the fiasco when a student in Florence in the 1970s. They've gone all soft and facile, their distinguishing tannins and acidity smoothed away for the global palate. A peasant wine has been smartened up and undermined. Many Spanish Riojas have undergone similar taming.The result is wines well adapted to our instant-gratification world, offering a blast of flavor followed by a great void. Because the new wines yield so easily, they have nothing left to give.The years cannot soften nonexistent tannins; fruit cannot be offset by nonexistent acidity. Aging is pointless. The Californization of Chianti is globalization at its banalizing worst.France has not been immune to this rush for a global taste; some winegrowing areas have had trouble competing with aggressively marketed New World wines. But this is a conservative country that knows that ease and good wine are rarely bedfellows, and a visit to Champagne remains a comforting experience.

LEOGNAN, France: Here in the sleek, modern cellar at Domaine de Chevalier, a historic estate concealed by a forest just west of town, the custom for tasting is reversed. In most wine regions, the whites serve primarily as palate-fresheners before the serious business of evaluating the reds. But the reds are the prelude here and elsewhere in Pessac-Léognan, in the heart of the historic Bordeaux region once known simply and evocatively as Graves.First come barrel samples of the fresh and lively 2007 red and the smoother, more polished 2006. Then, from bottles, the dense, powerful 2005 and the elegant 2004.Only now is it time for the whites. The Domaine de Chevalier 2007, still in oak barrels, trumpets its presence with an explosive burst of pure sauvignon blanc fruit and a beautifully opaque texture that invites repeated sips in an effort to penetrate the wine's mystery.The 2006, not yet bottled, is rounder and less flamboyant, showing evidence of the wine's other key component, the semillon grape, and the beginnings of a nutlike complexity that will emerge over a decade or so.These are serious, potentially profound dry whites, from Bordeaux of all places, which takes almost literally the jocular maxim that the first duty of wine is to be red. Pessac-Léognan is the home of renowned estates like Haut-Brion and La Mission Haut-Brion, not to mention other fine red wine producers like Haut-Bailly and Pape Clément. Indeed, around 85 percent of the wine made in Pessac-Léognan is red.

U.S. law firm seeks publicity - and clients - in France for lawsuit against Société Générale

PARIS: U.S. lawyers seeking to bring a class-action lawsuit against the French bank Société Générale over its billions of euros of unexpected losses this year came to France on Wednesday looking for publicity, in the latest example of American law firms seeking to drum up business overseas.Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins, one of the most prominent U.S. law firms specializing in class actions, hopes that a U.S. District Court in Manhattan will decide to certify that French shareholders of Société Générale are part of the class alongside their American counterparts.

"What I did during the Tour is done. I made a mistake and the mistake is only mine," Riccò said after the hearing behind closed doors in Rome."I have always won with my own legs. Unfortunately I've made a mistake and I will pay for it," Riccò added. "For now, I'm not even thinking of going back on a bike."I'm here because I had a huge burden and I wanted to get rid of it."

BEIJING: The Chinese government has confirmed what journalists arriving at the lavishly outfitted media center here have suspected: Contrary to previous assurances by Olympic and government officials, the Internet will be censored during the upcoming Games.The International Olympic Committee quietly agreed to some of the limitations, according to a press official, Kevin Gosper, the Reuters news agency reported.Gosper told Reuters on Wednesday that he had only just learned of the agreement. Sandrine Tonge, the IOC media relations coordinator, said the organization would press the Chinese authorities to reconsider the limits.

BEIJING: A Chinese schoolteacher who posted his photographs of quake-damaged schools on the Internet has been ordered to a labor camp for a year, a human rights group said Wednesday.The group, Human Rights in China, identified the teacher as Liu Shaokun and said he worked at Guanghan Middle School in Deyang City in Sichuan Province, which was ravaged by the powerful earthquake on May 12.

WASHINGTON: A top Central Intelligence Agency official traveled secretly to Islamabad this month to confront Pakistan's most senior officials with new information about ties between the country's powerful spy service and militants operating in Pakistan's tribal areas, according to American military and intelligence officials.The CIA emissary presented evidence showing that members of the spy service had deepened their ties with some militant groups who were responsible for a surge of violence in Afghanistan, possibly including the suicide bombing this month of the Indian Embassy in Kabul, the officials said.The decision to confront Pakistan with what the officials described as a new CIA assessment of the spy service's activities seemed to be the bluntest American warning to Pakistan about the ties between the spy service and Islamic militants since shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.The CIA assessment specifically points to links between members of the spy service, the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, and the militant network led by Maulavi Jalaluddin Haqqani, which American officials believe maintains close ties to senior figures of Al Qaeda in Pakistan's tribal areas.

MINGORA, Pakistan: Twenty-five Taliban militants and five Pakistani soldiers were killed in a fierce clash in the troubled Swat valley in Pakistan's northwest on Wednesday, the military said.The fighting broke out after about 70 militants attacked a security post in the Ucharai Sar area near Matta, a known stronghold of militants in the region.

KABUL: More foreign fighters are joining the ranks of Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan as militants increasingly cross the border from Pakistan to attack Afghan and Western troops, the Afghan Defence Ministry said on Wednesday.Afghanistan has kept up a barrage of criticism against neighbour Pakistan in the last three months, accusing Pakistani agents of being behind a string of high-profile attacks and allowing militants sanctuary along the long and porous border."The presence of foreign fighters is increasing, and increasingly the operations of the terrorists are led by foreigners," Defence Ministry spokesman General Mohammad Zaher Azimi told a news conference.

MIRANSHAH, Pakistan: Militants shot and killed an Afghan woman accused of being a U.S spy in Pakistan's North Waziristan region, and dumped her body in a sewer, a witness and intelligence officials said on Wednesday.The pro-Taliban militants in North and South Waziristan have killed dozens of people they accused of being Pakistani government supporters or spies for U.S. forces based in neighbouring Afghanistan.The killing of women, however, has been rare.The body of Gulzada Bibi, a woman in her mid-thirties, was found with three bullet wounds in her chest near Degan village, some 35 km (22 miles) west of Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan, the officials said."A note pinned to her body said she belonged to Afghanistan's Paktia province and was caught with a satellite phone she had been using to spy for the U.S.," said, Abdullah, a resident of the village.

The killing came two days after a suspected U.S. missile attack killed six people in neighbouring South Waziristan, that Pakistani intelligence officials said had killed an al Qaeda chemical and biological weapons expert named Abu Khabab-al-Masri.

Regarding the article "Female suicide bombers kill 48 in Iraq" (July 28): Why are we still shocked by female suicide bombers? We express shock that women could engage in that much violence, but history shows us that women are as capable of indiscriminate violence as men.Female suicide bombers have been with us since the 1980s and have shown how effective female human bombs can be in Sri Lanka, Chechnya and the Middle East.If women can go into combat for the United States military why is it so difficult to understand that they can also be on the front lines of a radical cause?

Julie Shedd Arlington, Virginia

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Another bomb defused in western India

AHMADABAD, India: Police defused another explosive device Wednesday in western India, bringing the total number of unexploded bombs found there in the last two days to 19.

Radovan Karadzic arrives in The Hague for trial at UN war crimes tribunal

THE HAGUE: Less than two weeks after the police pulled him off a bus in downtown Belgrade, Radovan Karadzic, the onetime psychiatrist turned warmonger who hid from the law as a peddler of New Age medicine, has now taken on a fresh persona, that of prisoner of the United Nations war crimes tribunal.He will have a cell to himself, equipped with a cable television on which he can undoubtedly follow broadcasts about this new stage of his notorious life.Reportedly shorn of his long hair and large beard that was part of his disguise for almost a decade, Karadzic is to appear in court for the first time on Thursday to answer for the brutalities he inflicted as the wartime leader of Bosnian Serbs.

Regarding the article "Karadzic backers' plan makes Belgrade uneasy" (July 29): The Hague tribunal has consistently demonstrated its anti-Serbian bias as it has mostly refused to prosecute and punish crimes committed against Serbian civilians. The release of the Bosnian Muslim Naser Oric and the Kosovo Albanian Ramush Haradinaj, despite overwhelming evidence of their crimes, are two of the most recent examples. Demanding the extradition of Radovan Karadzic to the Hague instead of trying him in Serbia may likely bring down Serbia's government and provoke a wave of violence that will further distance Serbia from Europe and contribute to further destabilizing the unstable Balkans. Is this really what European leaders want? Michael Pravica Henderson, Nevadahttp://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/30/opinion/edlet.php

U.S. blacks, if a nation, would rank high on AIDS

If black America were a country, it would rank 16th in the world in the number of people living with the AIDS virus, the Black AIDS Institute, an advocacy group, reported Tuesday.The report, financed in part by the Ford Foundation and the Elton John AIDS Foundation, provides a startling new perspective on an epidemic that was first recognized in 1981.Nearly 600,000 African-Americans are living with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and up to 30,000 are becoming infected each year. When adjusted for age, their death rate is two and a half times that of infected whites, the report said. Partly as a result, the hypothetical nation of black America would rank below 104 other countries in life expectancy.

Laurie Garrett is a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations

In a few days some 20,000 people who work in various capacities on the AIDS pandemic will gather in Mexico City for the International AIDS Conference. I will not be there: This will mark the first AIDS Conference I have deliberately missed since 1985, when a cluster of scientists convened the first such gathering in Atlanta.Many of the leading lights in the battle against AIDS from all over the world are similarly disinclined to attend, saying they are not able to join in celebrating the creation of a vast, multibillion dollar AIDS treatment industry, employing hundreds of thousands of individuals worldwide that serve as a vested lobby on behalf of a prolonged medical approach to a virus that ought to be eliminated entirely from the pantheon of threats to Humanity.Do not misunderstand - there is genuine joy among us every day that millions of people are kept alive because of the 1996 invention of combination drug treatment for HIV. All HIV-positive people the world over should be able to share in the benefits of those treatments, and the U.S. Congress is to be congratulated for recently passing a $48 billion reauthorization of the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or Pepfar.But it is troubling that formerly militant activists, United Nations agency leaders, government health officials, the American foreign policy establishment, religious leaders, scientists and physicians fail to see AIDS treatment for what it is: A stop-gap measure to tide humanity over until we can collectively reach what ought to be our real goal - stopping HIV's spread, entirely. On an individual basis living with AIDS is a proper goal; on a population basis it is catastrophic.

UNITED NATIONS, New York: The Security Council voted unanimously Wednesday to end its eight-year peacekeeping mission between Eritrea and Ethiopia, a failure that Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has warned could lead to war between the two neighbors in the Horn of Africa.Council members and other diplomats said the United Nations had little choice but to withdraw its 1,700-member force, which has been monitoring a buffer zone 25 kilometers, or 15 miles, wide and 1,000 kilometers long between the two nations.

ROME: A curious thing happened when Italian sunbathers near Naples found themselves steps away from the bodies of two Roma girls who drowned in the sea -- absolutely nothing.The girls had gone swimming, got into difficulty and drowned, despite a rescue attempt.Once their corpses were dragged ashore and covered with towels, many beachgoers went back to the task in hand, sunning themselves for an hour until police took the bodies of Cristina, 11, and her sister Violetta, 12, away.The reaction, or lack of it, was captured in a widely published photograph that has resonated in Italy and abroad. It has raised questions about attitudes towards Roma as Italy pursues a "census" of minorities as a way of tackling crime.

"Indifference isn't an emotion for human beings," said Naples Cardinal Crescenzo Sepe. "And it is much less one that can and should be directed at Violetta and Cristina, already marked by a life of hardship and perhaps weakened by prejudice."

MADRID: Authorities in Spain's Basque Country fear separatist guerrilla group ETA will attempt a big attack soon and have ordered police to increase security measures, police said on Wednesday.The rare warning, contained in an internal police memorandum later published on the police website, follows a spate of small bombings blamed on ETA at seaside resorts that are timed to hurt Spain's tourism sector during its high season.

NAZRAN, Russia: A car bomb exploded outside the regional police headquarters in the troubled Russian republic of Ingushetia on Wednesday morning, killing at least two police, officials said.The blast took place in the parking lot of Ingushetia's Interior Ministry in Nazran, the republic's principal city. Ministry and emergency officials variously gave the death toll at two or three officers, with at least three others seriously wounded.

DUBLIN: Ireland's unemployment rate has hit a 9-year high of 5.9 percent, government statisticians reported Wednesday, as economists warned that layoffs were spreading quickly from construction to most parts of the economy.

LONDON: Some 70,000 homeowners are currently in negative equity and that figure could rise to 1.7 million if house prices decline by a further 17 percent, according to Standard & Poors.The rating agency calculates that for every further percentage point decline in house prices, a further 0.5-1.5 percent of borrowers -- the equivalent of 60,000 to 180,000 homeowners -- could enter negative equity.

WASHINGTON: Tight-fisted U.S. consumers wary of anaemic economic growth opened their wallets between May and July and spent their economic stimulus checks, a recent study has found."Our findings underscore the potency of the economic stimulus payments in stabilizing consumer spending during recessions," said authors Christian Broda of the University of Chicago and Jonathan Parker of Northwestern University.The typical family increased their spending on food, mass-merchandise and drug products by 3.5 percent when their government stimulus checks arrived, the study found.

Companies in the U.S. unexpectedly added an estimated 9,000 jobs in July, a private report based on payroll data showed today.The increase followed a revised drop of 77,000 for the prior month that was smaller than previously estimated, ADP Employer Services said.

LONDON: Foreign Secretary David Miliband turned up the pressure Wednesday on Prime Minister Gordon Brown, publishing an article saying that their Labour Party must change and defy the odds to win the next election

LONDON: A senior British prosecutor's decision to drop a bribery investigation into BAE Systems Plc weapons contracts with Saudi Arabia doesn't need to be reconsidered, the highest court in Britain ruled.

The British opposition leader David Cameron gave Obama a copy of Winston Churchill's "A History of the English-Speaking Peoples" and a box of CDs by British bands, including the Smiths, Radiohead and the Gorillaz.

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Twitter Updates: Ian Walthew...

Twitter Updates

Things fall apart,Especially the neat order of rules and laws.The way we look at the world Is the way we really are.See it from a fair garden and everything looks cheerful,Climb to a higher plateau and you'll see plunder and murder.Truth and beauty are in the eye of the beholder.I stopped trying to figure everything out a long time ago.

A Place in the Auvergne

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Financial Times

‘Ian Walthew was a newspaper executive with a career that took him round the world, who one day did a mad thing. He saw a for-sale sign on a cottage in the Cotswolds, bought it, resigned and moved in. For the first few weeks he just lay on the grass in a daze. Then he started talking to his neighbours and digging into the rich history of this beautiful part of England. Out of his inquiries grew this affecting and inspiring memoir.What sets it apart from others of its ilk is the author’s enviable immunity to cliché and his determination to love his homeland better than he used to. His elegiac account of relearning how to be an Englishman should be required reading for anyone who claims to know or love this country.’Financial Times

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A Place in the Auvernge (Holiday rental)

Holiday house in the Auvergne

Moon Phase

Information Ebru

Unless I was away from 'The Valley', or on an occassional 'newsfast' holiday (e.g between 8th -31st August, 2008), I placed information between the photos of my daily life in the Auvergne. This information comes from theInternational Herald Tribune, from the edition dated the day after the date of each post, given the nature of newspaper cycles.

I tried to find connections between diverse information from around the world, to give the day's events a better sense of narrative. I called this 'information ebru'.

News is not news analysis, news analysis is not editorial, editorial is not commentary (columnists) and commentary is not views (contributors' views). All are differentiated accordingly.

The views, editorials and commentary quoted do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of the publisher of this blog.

Ebru

Ebru is a Turkish art form, the process of paper marbling that produces constantly changing interwoven patterns."We're not a mosaic, different from one another and fixed in glass," said Altinay, who earned her doctorate from Duke University. "Ebru is done on water. It is impossible to have clear lines or distinct borders."Source: IHT, 11/03/08

HOW TO FIND YOUR WAY AROUND THIS PLACE

This blog of one year's events (2008) started in a free form manner, but over time it has adopted some basic structure.

From May 2008, the following metathemes were generally placed under the same pictures (unless I was away from 'The Valley' or on a very occassional 'newsfast' holiday e.g. between 8th -31st August, 2008):

THREE IMPORTANT PLACES

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

The Observer

'Stressed city couple seeks slower life in Cotswolds idyll'. The premise is so familiar there's even a predictably technical term for it: 'downshifting'. Yet it's hard to think in those terms about A Place in My Country, given the care with which Ian Walthew has skirted all the sprung traps of nostalgia and sentiment. A thoughtful observer and magpie-ish collector of oral history, Walthew has a sharp sense of the absurdities and the assets of his native land, reinforced by years living overseas. In his country life, escaped cows and the hunt ball jostle for space with barn raves and hawkish property developers. Avoiding the usual bland elegy for the rustic and redemptive, his book is a valuable memoir, both personal and social, a meditation on belonging in one of many Englands.The Observer

A PLACE IN THE AUVERGNE

Holiday rental house in the Auvergne

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Times Literary Supplement

‘Even peripheral characters…really come to life; as does the beauty of the Cotswolds and the harsh realities it conceals. A Place in My Country is an edifying consideration of the English countryside, its rich history and its attempt to adapt in today’s world’Times Literary Supplement

OTHER PLACES

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Tim Butcher

‘I have been reading about the British countryside all my life but this is the first post-modern take on a national asset so routinely taken for granted. Author Ian Walthew takes a 12-inch plough to the cosy complacency that so many apply to the subject and reveals that 21st century rural life is not a place for the genteel - in a corner of Gloucestershire most commonly viewed by outsiders from their 4x4s as they hurry to overpriced weekend retreats, he finds a farming heartbeat that is proud and defiant, defended by a cast of characters that outshine The Archers. A revelation of a book.’Tim ButcherAuthor of Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart(Richard and Judy Galaxy Book of the Year 2008, 3rd Prize Winner)

A PLACE IN THE AUVERGNE

Holiday rental house in the Auvergne

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Daily Telegraph

'a poignant portrait of country life....the book could have been a rollicking, laugh-a-minute riff on ignorant townies having to ask what exactly a heifer is. There are certainly some fine comic episodes.. but it quickly turns into something more sombre - and more interesting...His beautifully written book is an elegy for an England that is dying, or at least in terminal decline.'Max Davidson, Daily Telegraph

'THE HOUR WE KNEW NOTHING OF EACH OTHER'

In a new play to the National Theatre in London, 27 actors perform for 90 minutes without uttering a word. The attraction is "The Hour We Knew Nothing of Each Other," written by the Australian playwright Peter Handke in 1992. The script has 60 pages of stage directions and no dialogue, although there are bangs, crashes, screams, and laughter. Handke said that the idea came to in him in the 1980s when he found dramatic meaning in the comings and goings in a town square near Trieste, Italy. "Is there much to discover in it?" he said of his play? "I don't know."

Source: IHT 13/02/08

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Lucy Wadham

‘This is a story about a man who leaves the reassuring numbness of the rat race, in order to relearn how to live. Not usually a non-fiction reader, I'm generally wary of 'confessional' books, which I often find narcissistic and dull. A Place in My Country is beautifully written, poignant and wise and has all the narrative pace of the best fiction. For anyone who loves England but doesn't necessarily know why.’Lucy WadhamAuthor of Lost, Castro’s Dream, Greater Love (Faber and Faber). Her first novel, Lost, was shortlisted for the Macallan Gold Dagger Award.

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

The Shooting Times

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Oxford Times

'Books about cosmopolitan urbanites discovering the joys of country life are two a penny, but this one is worth a second glance. Walthew's vivid description of the moral stress induced by his job as a high-flying executive with the International Herald Tribune newspaper is worth the cover price alone. The story of finding the dream cottage, the impulse buy, and the last-minute panic are standard for this genre, but Walthew has some more interesting things to say. His outgoing personality - and perhaps his cosmopolitan background, and his Australian wife - allowed him to integrate into village life but keep an outsider's point of view. He gradually realised that the villagers were far from the united community of townies' dreams, and that economics was forcing drastic changes on traditional rural life. Highly recommended.'Oxford Times

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

Mail on Sunday

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

www.thebookbag.co.uk

‘At the age of 34 Ian Walthew was the worldwide marketing director of the International Herald Tribune living in various parts of the world and leading a jet-set lifestyle. He was also on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Faced with a move back to London, he resigned and rather than buy a property in London he and his Australian wife bought a cottage in the Cotswolds to give Ian the peace which he needed to recuperate.The cottage was next door to Norman's farm. Norman was a bit fearsome until you got to know him, but his struggles to keep the farm going in the face of falling prices and competition from the highly mechanised 'agri-business' arable farms kept him under a lot of pressure. Little by little Ian and Han develop a relationship with Norman and the other characters of this tightly-knit community.When I started this book I did wonder if it was going to be an English version of Peter Mayle’s A Year in Provence - an amusing and entertaining read but ultimately rather superficial. I couldn't have been further from the truth. This isn't just the story of two people wanting an escape from the city; it's an examination of the state of the British countryside and a careful consideration of whether or not the way of life is sustainable. At times the writing had me close to tears.The stars of this book are the people. Although Ian narrates the book he doesn't dominate it, but allows the villagers to shine through. It was fascinating to see his relationship with them develop after it was initially assumed by some people in the village that he and Han would be part of a more upper-class set. The couple's growing relationship with Norman sees him take a fuller part in village life. Geoff, the larger than life landlord of the local pub becomes a firm friend, but it's Tom, the ex-gamekeeper, to whom Ian becomes closest and who introduces him to the real country way of life.It's several days now since I finished the book, but I was so moved by it that I didn't feel able to write about it immediately. It's by no means an easy read, but it's one of the most rewarding books that I've read for quite a while.’www.thebookbag.co.uk

IAN WALTHEW'S LINKS

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

A PLACE IN THE AUVERGNE

Holiday rental house in the Auvergne

THE WORLD OUTSIDE THE VALLY: Snippets from the IHT

"Before there was the rich, the poor and people in the middle; now there is nobody in the middle," said Muhammad Abdel Wahid, 36, an elevator technician who earns less than $50 a month. "There are the rich, they eat and drink; there are the poor, and they die."Newspaper advertising revenue in the United States fell 7.9 percent in 2007, the second-worst year in more than half a century, according to the Newspaper Association of America.Stuff White People Like: "The No. 1 reason why white people like not having a TV," reads the explanation under entry No. 28, Not Having a TV, "is so that they can tell you that they don't have a TV."ASSETS managed by sorverign wealth funds will triple from last year's figure to more than $10 trillion by 20`5, fueled by foreign exchange reserves and rising commodity prices, the International Finacial Services London predicted.Among the 30 nations in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a club of industrial countries, only Mexicans, Koreans and Greeks pay less in taxes than Americans, as a share of the economy. The United States also ranks near the bottom on public spending on social programs: 19 percent of the nation's total output in 2003, compared with 29 percent in Sweden, 23 percent in Portugal and almost 30 percent in France.In 1893, Friedrich Engels wrote from London to Friedrich Adolph Sorge, another German Communist then living in New York, lamenting how America's diversity hindered efforts to establish a workers' party in the United States. Was it possible to unify Poles, Germans, Irish, "the many small groups, each of which understands only itself"? All the bourgeoisie had to do was wait, "and the dissimilar elements of the working class fall apart again.""There's this notion that there's an authentic race and you must fit it," said Bratter, now an assistant professor of sociology at Rice University in Houston who researches interracial families. "We're confronted with the lack of fit."The old categories are weakening, however, as immigration and the advancing age of marriage in the United States fuel a rise in the number of interracial marriages. The 2000 census counted 3.1 million interracial couples, or about 6 percent of married couples. For the first time, the census that year allowed respondents to identify themselves as of "two or more races," a category that now includes 7.3 million Americans, about 3 percent of the population.By the end of 2007, China firmly eclipsed Canada as the No. 1 seller of goods to the United States. U.S.-China trade relations are a one-sided affair. It is an asymmetrical relationship in which the colonial power enjoys positive terms of trade and balance of payment. Also, the top Chinese exports to the United States are no longer garments and toys, but machinery and industrial equipment.In France there are what the historian Pierre Nora calls the realms of memory, major sites such as Verdun or the Lascaux caves. But there are also unconsidered places as crucial in their small way, such as Deyrolle, where for more than a century people have come to savor the musty delights of lions lying down with lambs, spooky beetles and strange birds. More like an 18th-century cabinet de curiosités than a simple model of the taxidermist's art, it has attracted scholars, grandparents buying posters of Dangerous Plants and the Amazonian Forest, such Surrealists as Dali and Breton, and decades of wide-eyed children.Perhaps the most extreme reaction to the burdens of winter has been repeated incidents of what the police call snow rage. Most are territorial disputes that erupt when homeowners who have run out of space on their property begin tossing snow onto neighboring properties.A defining moment occurred in Quebec City, where a 63-year-old man confronted a 25-year-old woman from a commercial clearing service who was blowing snow onto his yard. After banging on her tractor and shouting at her, the man rushed back into his house and returned with a shotgun to reinforce his complaint. The police have charged him with negligent use of a firearm and seized his collection of 13 guns.Last year, according to Agriculture Department data, average cropland rents rose 7 percent to $85 an acre.Rents as a percent of crop land value - a metric akin to the earnings yield on a stock - have declined over the past 10 years across the country, from about 4.96 percent in 1998 to 3.15 percent last year. By comparison, from January 1926 through December 2007, the annualized total return for the S&P 500-stock index was 10.4 percent per year. So while the cost of U.S. farmland is rising, the real return that land generates has fallen.During the past decade, the average price of an acre of U.S. cropland has doubled, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, from $1,340 in 1998 to $2,700 in 2007. Last year alone, average prices nationwide jumped 13 percent.Around the beginning of the 19th century, the British political economist Thomas Malthus said population had the potential to grow much faster than food supply, a prediction that efficient farming consistently proved wrong. Now, at the beginning of the 21st century, some are revisiting his predictions.Thieves peeled long strips of lead from the roof of St. Michael and All Angels, until a barking dog sent them fleeing from this tiny Leicestershire village. But by then, they had left a hole of about 100 square feet in the top of the 800-year-old church.I have to confess, I don't drink much California pinot noir. The prevailing thick, fruit-and-oak-drenched style, often with a touch of sweetness, does not appeal to me.I find that these wines are clumsy at the table, overwhelming and fatiguing. In short, many of the leading California pinot noirs today seem to me to be the antithesis of what pinot noirs ought to be: light, elegant, graceful and refreshingAnother, the seemingly normal Julie Meyer, lives in an eternal present imposed by a catastrophic car accident that killed her daughter, whom she cannot remember.“When she attempts to read, the words vanish from the front of the paragraph; when she watches a movie, every scene is the opening scene,” Mr. Mason writes. Although her procedural memory is fine — she can perform mechanical tasks like cooking or making a telephone call — Ms. Meyer has to be reintroduced to her husband every time he visits the hospital. Like the main character in the film “Memento,” she keeps notes to guide her through the day and studies, with ferocious intensity, facial expressions and behavior to separate friends from strangers. She fakes her way through life. Mao Zedong announced the tune himself, in 1927, when he wrote: "A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay or painting a picture or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another."Elmaleh, 36, is a restless interviewee who slips in and out of various voices, endlessly curious - "That's enough about me, let's talk about American women: They're really not into seduction are they?" He is a compulsive observer, addicted to listening in on people's conversations.At a Right Bank café, his ears are tuned into the power breakfast at a neighboring table. "I can't help it," he says. "Wow! I'm sorry. These people are selling something, but I can't make it out. . . This is how I get my material, how I write. I can't make up anything, just the form."In Poland, 22 percent of the work force is employed in agriculture and the country boasts by far the highest number of farms in Europe. Most of them are tiny.The average size is 7 hectares, or 17 acres, compared to more than 24 hectares in Spain, France and Germany, the Union's other large agriculture players. There are 1.5 million small farms in Poland. Only Italy, with its proliferation of high-end, niche agricultural products compares with Poland in its abundance of small producers."What I like is the poetique of the situation," he [Jean Nouvel] said. "I am a hedonist, and I want to give pleasure to other people."Lahiri shows that people may be felled at any time by swift jabs of chance, wherever they happen to live. Uncontrollable events may assail them. More often, they suffer less dramatic reversals: failed love affairs, alcoholism, even simple passivity - the sort of troubles that seem avoidable to everyone except the person who succumbs to them. Like Laura, the well-meaning narrator of "Brief Encounter," the men and women of Lahiri's stories often find themselves overwhelmed by unexpected passions.Kevin Federline might play the part of the pauper to his pop princess ex-wife Britney Spears, but in Las Vegas he is king.Federline spent over $43,000 on Las Vegas hotels, dining and shopping between May 2007 and January of this year, according to documents filed by Federline's attorney in his custody battle with Spears. The documents were released by the Superior Court on Thursday.The tabs included $1,445 for clothing at Gianni Versace, $3,863 at TAO nightclub, and $3,008 at the Hard Rock Beach Club.He appears determined not to be branded a cheap tipper. At Scores strip club, he dropped a cool $2,000 on a $365 meal bill.Meanwhile, his company, Gooseneck Productions, Inc., spent $841,129 in 2007 while earning $544,075, according to the documents."The horizon is such a basic way of comprehending the space around us, comprehending our basic relationship to the globe," Leong said one recent morning over tea in Manhattan."In terms of looking, the horizon is the farthest we can see," he explained, yet in terms of knowledge, it reflects the "limit of experience.""Males typically oversell their abilities while women undersell themselves," said Alex Tosolini, general manager at Procter & Gamble in Poland. Smart leaders, he said, will "adjust men's claims about themselves downward and women's upward to get an accurate reading of reality."Nearly a third of American high school students don't graduate (half in the cities). Seventy percent of African-American kids are born out of wedlock. The premise of many good French movies that not everyone's decent or kind, that everything may not turn out great, and that nice doesn't automatically follow from funny, may be the key in making them a hard sell away from home.In fact, this is exactly their uniqueness and what's not lost in translation.As economies grow richer, more buildings and infrastructure are constructed to make them run. As citizens become wealthier, they acquire more of an appetite for meat to make their bodies run. As Alec Walsh, an analyst at Harding, Loevner Management, noted, consumption of pork in China has doubled since 1990. And more meat means more grain: It takes up to five tons of grain to produce a ton of meat.Walsh invoked an argument for higher grain prices that recalls the one long used to promote the virtues of owning real estate: "The amount of arable land that exists for new crops is finite."Only 28 percent of Americans knew American casualties in Iraq were nearing 4,000 last month [April 2008], according to the Pew Research Center. The Project for Excellence in Journalism found that by March 2008 the percentage of prominent news stories that were about Iraq had fallen to about one-fifth of what it was in January 2007. It's a poignant commentary on the whole war that Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, the nonpartisan advocacy group, was reduced to protesting the lack of coverage.More than 200,000 Michigan residents worked for subsidiaries of foreign companies as of 2005, according to government data.Yet in a state that has lost 300,000 manufacturing jobs since 2000, foreign investment has not been enough to compensate; indeed, it has sometimes exacerbated the erosion.The economist Jeffrey D. Sachs, head of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, stated the case bluntly in a recent article in Scientific American: “Even with a cutback in wasteful energy spending, our current technologies cannot support both a decline in carbon dioxide emissions and an expanding global economy. If we try to restrain emissions without a fundamentally new set of technologies, we will end up stifling economic growth, including the development prospects for billions of people.”What is needed, Mr. Sachs and others say, is the development of radically advanced low-carbon technologies, which they say will only come about with greatly increased spending by determined governments on what has so far been an anemic commitment to research and development. A Manhattan-like Project, so to speak.This year, governance experts say, they are livid. “They are furious about the dichotomy of experiences — their shares fall, yet C.E.O. pay still rises,” said Paul Hodgson, a senior research associate at the Corporate Library, a governance research group.The compensation research firm Equilar recently compiled data about chief executive pay at 200 companies that filed their proxies by March 28 and had revenues of at least $6.5 billion. And the data illustrates Mr. Hodgson’s point. It shows that average compensation for chief executives who had held the job at least two years rose 5 percent in 2007, to $11.2 million (If new C.E.O.’s are counted, that number is $11.7 million). Even though performance-based bonuses were down last year, the value and prevalence of discretionary bonuses — ones not linked to performance — were up. A result is that C.E.O.’s who have held their jobs for two years received an average total bonus payout of $2.8 million, up 1.1 percent from 2006.The lesson from history for China's leaders is that foreign interference leads to political instability. There are two ways to prevent this: having influence in foreign affairs and making sure there is no domestic opposition.The leading Western governments openly pressuring Beijing would not only be futile but counterproductive. It would sooner cause the Chinese government to further limit political freedom, than grant more of it.Frans-Paul van der Putten The Hague"When we argue that a woman owns the uterus, and it's her right to decide whether to deliver the baby or not, people won't buy it," said Yuan Xin, director of psychology at the Consulting Center of Nankai University. "If you are a woman, your personal choice is monitored and supervised by a lot of others, and they expect you to do what everyone else does."During World War I, France mobilized about 600,000 colonial troops, including many Muslims from Algeria and Tunisia, of whom 78,000 were killed. About 1.2 million French soldiers were killed in the war.France's estimated five million Muslims makes them Europe's largest Muslim community, making up about 8 percent of the population.Vandals desecrated 148 graves in the Muslim section of a military cemetery in northern France, hanging a pig's head on one of the headstones, the police said Sunday.Elegant , nice and intelligent, but not yet a great first lady. That was the verdic of a CSA opinion poll on Carla Sarkozy published on Sunday [April 2008] by Le Parisien newspaper.Ninety two percent describing her as elegant, 89 percent as modern, 73 percent as nice and 69 percent as intelligent. However, when asked which first lady of the modern era had respresented France well, she came in sixth out of seven, receiving an approval rating of 43 percent against 81 percent for Bernadette Chirac, wife of the previous president.Thai farmers harvest an average of 2.63 tons per hectare, or about a ton per acre, compared with 6.22 tons per hectare in China, 4.22 in Indonesia, 3.03 in India and 7.55 in the United States. These yields are not only a measure of efficiency but also reflect the strains of rice produced."The assumption is that all farmers are better off when prices go up," said Robert Zeigler, director general of the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines. "The problem is that a large proportion of rice producers in the world are actually net rice buyers - they produce less than their actual needs."Rice prices have been creeping upward since the beginning of this decade, but it was not until February that they spiked sharply. The price of Thai B grade rice, a widely traded variety, reached $795 per ton last week [April 2008], an increase of 147 percent from a year earlier."Nobody has ever seen such a jump in the price of rice," said Kwanchai Gomez, the executive director of the Thai Rice Foundation, a research center. "Certainly not in my lifetime, and that's a long time."She is 68 years old.Tu ne peux pas savoir mais j' ai fait des etudes de Geographie et d Histoire avec une specialite de Geographie Rurale; il me reste peu de choses de cette epoque de ma vie , mais je reste tres interessée.Je viens de retrouver dans ma bibliothèque les Memoires d un Village Anglais de Ronald Blythe edité en 1969 en GB. Cela concerne si ma memoire est bonne l East Anglia.Je l ai en français bien sur edite par Plon dans la Collection Terre Humaine traduit par Jacques B Hess; Je n ai pas retrouve le titre en anglais. Si tu as envie de le lire en francais , je peux t' offrir le mien. Je suis sure qu 'il ira dans des mains et deav,nt des yeux interessés.En France , il y a une excellente serie de romans qui explique le developpement et la chute d'une marge du Massif Central; la Corrèze; Peut -etre un peu facile, peut-etre un peu grand public, la saga de Claude Michelet montre bien ce qui s est passe dans les campagnes francaises entre 1900 et 1960 depuis l electrification en passant par la SNCF et la politique agricole europeenne. Claude Michelet est un des fils d' un ministre de de Gaulle qui a refuse de quitter la terre.'What went wrong at UBS" (April 5) is no different from what went wrong at Citigroup, Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch and so many other banks. The fault lies in the system: Chief executives and high-ranking officers get huge salaries and bonuses when their institutions make a profit, but don't pay a penalty when shareholders get fleeced because of their poor decisions. The system encourages risk-taking at the expense of prudence.Did any of the chief executives at Citi, Merril or UBS end up in the doghouse? When things go well, the chief executives are rewarded. When things go awry, it's the market's fault.Thomas Unger, São PauloAs a novice architect, Wittgenstein obviously had large ambitions. “I am not interested in erecting a building,” he once wrote, “but in ... presenting to myself the foundations of all possible buildings.” Whether or not his sister’s house approached this high ideal, Wittgenstein himself judged the finished building to be austere and sterile. It has “good manners,” he later wrote, but no “primordial life,” no “health.”A court in Spain says a boat skipper has been sentenced to 16 years in prison for the death of 10 Africans who drowned while trying to reach Spain.The Provincial Court in the Canary Islands says the Moroccan skipper ordered people in the crowded boat to jump into the water 50 meters (yards) off the island of Gran Canaria and swim ashore, without checking how deep the water was.

"Working on Sundays calls into question the very foundation of society," said lawyer Vincent Lecourt, who represents the Force Ouvrière union."It is a day when we try to consume less," he said, "when we try to have values that are a little different."In a written judgment published Monday, the court said Wilders' right to free speech and role as a politician allow him to voice his criticisms of radical Islam and the Quran.As a lawmaker, Wilders "must be able to — sometimes in sharp terms — express his opinions," the ruling said. "In this context, it cannot be said that (Wilders') statements — even though provocative — are an incitement to hate or violence against Muslims."The lack of investment in exploration and refineries has left Mexico in dire straits. Oil production has been falling since 2005. Last year alone, it dropped 5.3 percent, to about 3.1 billion barrels a day."If yesterday sin had a rather individualistic dimension, today it has a value and resonance that is above all social, because of the great phenomenon of globalization," Girotti told the newspaper L'Osservatore Romano."Forced Labor and the Catholic Church 1939-1945," is the most thorough look at the issue so far.The 703-page report documents the fate of 1,075 prisoners of war and 4,829 civilians who were forced to work for the Nazis in nearly 800 Catholic institutions - mainly hospitals, homes and monastery gardens - as part of the war effort.The church, which has financed over 200 "reconciliation" projects, said exact numbers would never be known."It should not be concealed that the Catholic Church was blind for too long to the fate and suffering of men, women and children from the whole of Europe who were carted off to Germany as forced laborers," Cardinal Karl Lehmann, the country's leading Roman Catholic prelate until he stepped down from his post as chairman of the Congregation of German Bishops in February, said at the presentation of the report.Homosexuality is not illegal in Egypt, though it is a convenient target, said Hani Shukrallah, executive director of the Heikal Foundation for Arab Journalism in Cairo."Meaningless crackdowns have become a regular thing," Shukrullah said. "If not gays, devil worshippers. If not devil worshippers, apostates. The government needs to outbid Islamic opponents as guardian of morals."Why diners need to be escorted by white-gloved attendants from the lobby of the new pyramid-shaped Raffles Hotel to the elevator bank remains unclear. But when you arrive at the Fire & Ice Restaurant (Sheikh Rashid Road, Wafi; 971-4-324-8888; www.dubai.raffles.com), the place can only be described as warm and inviting: exposed brick walls, leather chairs and flattering lighting. But it's not without its gimmicks. The open-air kitchen is ringed by fire, and the "ice tartar" dishes are injected with liquid nitrogen so they emit a milky white vapor. Once the cow [a cow preserved in formaldehyde, one of the British artist Damien Hirst's most famous works] cleared customs, however, the formaldehyde was found to be a problem. The original cow and calf had started to rot. The museum will be showing a new version.No Palestinian state exists to this day, but there has been an autonomous Irish state since 1922. Most people now believe that there should be a two-state settlement in the Holy Land, but a two-state settlement is what Ireland achieved more than 80 years ago.The equivalent of the IRA's demand for a United Ireland, only put aside for the moment, is the one by Hamas for a United Palestine. As Ahmed Yousef, a Palestinian adviser, has said, Hamas is endlessly told that it must recognize Israel's right to exist but, "Irish republicans continue to aspire to a united Ireland . . . Why should more be demanded of the Palestinians?"The way forward, Petraeus said, should be "conditions-based."Even in a place as prosaic as the Senate, this news spurred existential angst.Senator Evan Bayh summed up the Dada nature of America's plan in Iraq: "We'll know when we get there, and we don't know when we're going to get there."A confused Senator Chuck Hagel asked the pair: "So, where's the surge? What are we doing? I don't see Secretary Rice doing any Kissingeresque flying around. Where is the diplomatic surge? So, where is the surge? What are you talking about?"What exactly is a Kurd? Much hinges on the reply. For years the Turkish government simply denied the existence of its millions of Kurds, calling them “mountain Turks who have forgotten their language.”In fact, the Kurds are a distinct, ancient ethnic group with their own non-Arabic language who inhabit parts of Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq. Like the Palestinians, they are a people without a homeland and are much less likely than the Palestinians to get one."The floor of the hospital is covered with the blood of children," said Qasim al-Mudalla, manager of the Imam Ali Hospital in Sadr City, where he said 4 children and 2 women were among 11 dead bodies brought in Wednesday. "What is the world doing? They have seen the blood of our children and are doing nothing." "There's a Chinese saying: river water and well water don't mix," said Rose Pak, the general consultant to the Chinese Chamber of Commerce, which supports the relay. "You do your thing, and we do our thing. Why is it you have to disrupt our celebration, when none of us went and disrupted their celebration?"A few years ago, Sotheby's did not even hold auctions of Chinese contemporary art. But last year, Sotheby's sold nearly $200 million worth of Asian contemporary art, the vast majority of that by Chinese artists.Here's an arresting allegation: More slaves are now imported (though the current word for this is trafficked) into the United States annually than were imported in an average year during the American colonial era.That is one of the talking points used lately by the author of an arresting new book on global slavery, "A Crime So Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern-Day Slavery," by E. Benjamin Skinner.In the United States, the best estimates indicate that 40,000 to 50,000 people are held in slavery at any given time, with about 17,000 people brought into the country and forced to work for nothing every year. The largest single category of them are forced to work as prostitutes, but a majority are domestic servants or some other form of forced labor.

Experts say that as many as 100,000 gang members rule the streets of Central America, most of them in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras. The gangs have affiliated groups in Mexico and the United States, creating an international net of lawlessness. How many are girls is not clear, though a recent study said that as many as 40 percent of the region's gang members may be females, showing off their sexuality even as they learn to strut and throw a fierce punch.The line between memory and memorialization is never easy to draw, especially in France. In no other country, Thomas agrees, could the simple little cake called a madeleine have the resonance it acquired with Proust. As A.J. Liebling, the American journalist and famously hearty eater, remarked some years ago, the madeleine is now as firmly established in folklore as Newton's apple. He went on to wonder how anyone could be inspired by so small a cake:"In the light of what Proust wrote with so mild a stimulus, it is the world's loss that he did not have a heartier appetite," he wrote. "On a dozen Gardiners Island oysters, a bowl of clam chowder, a peck of steamers, some bay scallops, three sauteed softshelled crabs, a few ears of fresh-picked corn, a thin swordfish steak of generous area, a pair of lobsters and a Long Island duck, he might have written a masterpiece."In 2005, the U.S. authorities concluded that a Monsanto consultant had visited the home of an Indonesian official and, with the approval of a senior company executive, handed over an envelope stuffed with hundred-dollar bills. The money was meant as a bribe to win looser environmental regulations for Monsanto's cotton crops, according to a court document. Monsanto was also caught concealing the bribe with fake invoices.Most Haitians survive on less than $2 a day, and rioters say the prices of staples have spiraled so high that most people are going hungry."Sweetheart, not long to go now," Khan says as he holds his daughter and kisses her. "And I'm going to miss you a lot." He concludes: "I'm doing what I'm doing for the sake of Islam, not, you, know, it's not for materialistic or worldly benefits."In "Slavery by Another Name" Douglas A. Blackmon eviscerates one of our schoolchildren's most basic assumptions: that slavery in America ended with the Civil War. Blackmon unearths shocking evidence that the practice persisted well into the 20th century. And he is not simply referring to the virtual bondage of black sharecroppers unable to extricate themselves economically from farming.He describes free men and women forced into industrial servitude, bound by chains, faced with subhuman living conditions and subject to physical torture. That plight was horrific. But until 1951, it was not outside the law.Italy has no minimum wage, and there is strong resistance to instituting one.More than one million people from neighbouring army-ruled Myanmar are estimated to work in Thailand, most of them illegally in factories, restaurants, at petrol pumps, and as domestic helpers or crew on fishing trawlers.The onrush of Western sympathy for the cause of Tibet is well-intentioned but often naïve. The way the Tibet story has been reduced to a binary matter, almost literally of Tibetan saints and Han Chinese sinners, is problematic on many levels, not least because of hypocrisy implicit in the West's selective outrage.Rippert, then 22, found a P-38 with French colors and shot it down.He described the odd, evasive loops flown by Saint-Exupéry, who at the time was 44, overweight and in pain from fractures sustained in numerous flying accidents. Several days later, when German radio intercepted American reports of a search for Saint-Exupéry, he suspected he may have shot down his idol.When Rippert told him of learning that Saint-Exupéry was missing, "he had tears in his eyes," von Gartzen said.When an airplane carrying Lukoil workers crashed in the far north of this Arctic region three years ago, killing 29 of 52 people on board, many blamed the weather.When, one year later, in March 2006, a helicopter carrying victims' relatives to a commemoration ceremony at the crash site also fell, killing another person, the indigenous people thought something else was at play. The land, they said, was cursed.One of the newest oil-producing regions in Russia, the Nenets autonomous district is home to lucrative projects for Lukoil and Rosneft. It is also home to a population of 7,000 indigenous Nenets whose livelihood and semi-nomadic way of life are being increasingly threatened by the growing oil industry."They defied the energy of the land," said Kolya, a Nenets shaman who at 39 looks at least 20 years older, speaking of the crashes. Squatting in his tent, called a choom, 5 kilometers, or 3 miles, from Naryan-Mar in the snow-covered tundra one recent evening, he spoke slowly."The earth started to sink and all the souls started to rise," he said.Overseas aid by rich countries fell 8.4 percent last year. Developed nations would have to increase their aid budgets by 35 percent over the next three years just to meet the commitments they made in 2005.Washington provides a subsidy of 51 cents a gallon to ethanol blenders and slaps a tariff of 54 cents a gallon on imports. Even the poorest fifth of households in the United States spend only 16 percent of their budget on food. In many other countries, it is less of a given. Nigerian families spend 73 percent of their budgets to eat, Vietnamese 65 percent, Indonesians half. According to a recent estimate by the Urban Institute, the lack of health insurance leads to 27,000 preventable deaths in America each year.Not long ago, a young Ohio woman named Trina Bachtel, who was having health problems while pregnant, tried to get help at a local clinic. Unfortunately, she had previously sought care at the same clinic while uninsured and had a large unpaid balance. The clinic wouldn't see her again unless she paid $100 per visit - which she didn't have.Eventually, she sought care at a hospital 30 miles away. By then, however, it was too late. Both she and the baby died.Many of the stories about the globalization of baby production begin in India, where the government seems to regard this as, literally, a growth industry. In the little town of Anand, dubbed "The Cradle of the World," 45 women were recently on the books of a local clinic. For the production and delivery of a child, they will earn $5,000 to $7,000, a decade's worth of women's wages in rural India.But even in America, some women, including Army wives, are supplementing their income by contracting out their wombs. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the bulk of SWF investment is in fact channeled into other emerging markets - Saudi Arabia, for example, has invested heavily in the Turkish telecom sector and China has focused most of its attention on Africa."Terror and Consent" is quite simply the most profound book to have been written on the subject of American foreign policy since the attacks of 9/11 - indeed, since the end of the Cold War. It should be read by all three of the remaining candidates to succeed George W. Bush as American president.Bobbitt's originality lies in his almost unique ability to synthesize three quite different traditions of scholarship. The first is history. The second is law. The third is military strategy. For the past 43 years no Pakistan-made film had been distributed commercially to cinemas in India until Mansoor's "Khuda Kay Liye" ("In the Name of God") premiered here April 4 - a fact that has contributed to widespread ignorance in India about modern Pakistan.At current rates of migration, the United Nations Human Settlements Program has projected that one-quarter of the earth’s population will live in so-called slums by the year 2020.More than two and a half billion people in the world live in the most abysmal standards of hygiene and sanitation.

There are 46 countries, home to 2.7 billion people, where climate change and water-related crises create a high risk of violent conflict.

A further 56 countries, representing another 1.2 billion people, are at high risk of political instability. That's more than half the world.

James Cayne, chairman and former chief executive of the collapsed bank Bear Stearns was paid some $40 million in cash between 2004 and 2006, the last year on record, as well as stocks and options. In the past few years, he has sold shares worth millions more. He won't have to return the money he made in the good days when his bank betted itself into oblvion.

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is estimated to have holdings of as much as $900 billion, making it the largest sovereign wealth fund in the world.

For the first time ever, the number of billionaires Forbes could identify crossed into four figures, reaching 1,125. The total net worth of the group is $4.4 trillion, up $900 billion from last year.

In 2004, American credit card debt grew at a rate of $6.25 billion a quarter. In just the fourth quarter of 2007, it grew by $20 billion. Total credit card debt stands today at about $950 billion. That is still not close to the $11 trillion in mortgages, but it’s within spitting distance of auto loans.

The pension fund of the Turkish Army (the Ordu Yardimlasma Kurumu fund) is $25 billion.

An inescapable cycle of debt is fueling one of the worst agrarian crises facing India, a crisis that has seen some 150,000 farmers commit suicide since 1997.

Worldwide, water bottlers sold 47 billion gallons, or 178 billion liters, in 2006, up from 43 billion gallons in 2005.

Globally, the bottling industry uses the equivalent of nearly 100 million barrels of oil each year, excluding transportation.

Bottled water is often 1,000 times more expensive than tap water.

In "Dandy of the Underworld" Horsley, who is notorious in Britain, writes of being raised by alcoholic, sexually promiscuous parents and bouncing through several schools. He details a debauched life of cocaine, heroin, opium and amphetamine use, writing that he spent more than £100,000 (nearly $200,000) on crack cocaine and £100,000 to consort with more than 1,000 prostitutes. He also chronicles his trip to the Philippines to be hung from a cross, an event that was recorded by a photographer and videographer and formed part of an art exhibition that was extensively covered by the news media in his home country.Carrie Kania, publisher of Harper Perennial, said Horsley's party, which was scheduled for Wednesday in Manhattan, would go on without him. "I believe this book is very important," Kania said. "It certainly moved me, and we're going to continue to back it 100 percent."

The production of one kilogram of beef requires 16,000 liters of water, according to to the Unesco-IHE Institute for Water Education. That compares with 1,500 liters for a kilogram of grain.

China...has a fifth of the world's population buy just 7 percent of the water.

A collapase of the Indian summer monsoon from as early as next year is one of the world's most immediate, serious climate risks.

An average European uses 150 to 400 liters, or 40 to 106 gallons, of water daily for personal requirements. Consumption in the United States is almost twice as high, but in China the figure is only 90 liters per day on average, while in many developing countries it is below the "critical threshold" of 50 liters a day set by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization.

"People want more toys to play with. That's something that drives it," said Wim Koersvelt, director of Icon Yachts in the Netherlands. "Gyms were unusual 20 years ago, and no yacht is being built now without a gym. They're buying two- to four-person submarines, have four Jet Skis and little sailboats stored on board, as well as helicopter landing pads."

The firearms-homicide rate of about 3.42 per 100,000 citizens is the highest of any industrialized country. It is about 100-fold the gun-homicide rate in Britain or Japan; only violence-prone developing nations like Colombia have a higher rate.

Last year, more children died from gunfire than from cancer and HIV/AIDS combined; the firearms death rate for kids under 15 is 12 times more than the 25 other largest industrialized countries combined, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The United States has the highest concentration of gun ownership in the world, 283 million guns - a third of them handguns - owned by about a third of the citizenry.

"There are 300 million people in China poised to buy their very first car. In Russia there are 70 million. And in Asia, 250 million people aspire to motorized mobility," the VW chief executive, Martin Winterkorn, said at VW's annual news conference.

Steve Randy Waldman, who writes at interfluidity.powerblogs.com, estimates that after the most recent $200 billion is exhausted, the Fed will have $300 billion to $400 billion left, unless it finds a way to expand its balance sheet. (14/03/08)

According to a 2005 World Bank study, a whopping 47 percent of college-educated Ghanaians live abroad.

The problem is especially acute in medicine, where 54 percent of physicians who trained here between 1999 and 2004 left to work elsewhere.

That's in a country with just 2,000 doctors, or one for every 11,000 inhabitants. By comparison, the United States has one doctor for every 2,000 people. Some hospitals here have no doctor at all, while others hire a single physician to care for thousands of patients.

Two-thirds of Americans cannot name the three branches of government or come up with the name of a single Supreme Court justice.

One survey finds that American 15-year-olds rank 24th out of those from 29 countries in mathematical literacy, and another indicating that only 57 percent of adult Americans had read a nonfiction book in a year.

Carlyle Group, the U.S. private equity firm run by David Rubenstein, said Wednesday that losses at its $16 billion mortgage-bond fund would not hurt the company's 59 other private equity and venture capital funds."The challenges facing CCC will have no measurable impact on any other fund, " Carlyle said. (12/03/08)

The United States has a population of 300 million. Thirty-seven million, many of them children, live in poverty. Close to 60 million are just one notch above the official poverty line. These near-poor Americans live in households with annual incomes that range from $20,000 to $40,000 for a family of four.

While natural gas provides 22 percent of the world's energy, compared with 23 percent for coal and 40 percent for oil, the world's known gas reserves may last about 63 years, compared with 41 for oil, the BP statistics show.

"Who is this guy Margin that keeps calling me?"

When did character morph into celebrity, making the fame game the focus of magazine photography?

Brazil, a large agricultural exporter, says rich nations want to keep triple-digit tariffs on some farm products, including a 1,720 percent tariff on one Japanes product.

Last month, a team of American, British and Canadian researchers concluded that not a single square foot of ocean had been left untouched by modern society, and that humans had fouled 41 percent of the seas with polluted runoff, overfishing and other abuses.

As the newly urbanized and newly affluent seek more protein and more calories, a phenomenon called "diet globalization" is playing out around the world. Demand is growing for pork in Russia, beef in Indonesia and dairy products in Mexico. Rice is giving way to noodles, home-cooked food to fast food.Though racked with upheaval for years and with many millions still rooted in poverty, Nigeria has a growing middle class. Median income per person doubled in the first half of this decade, to $560 in 2005. Much of this increase is being spent on food.Nigeria grows little wheat, but its people have developed a taste for bread, in part because of marketing by American exporters. Between 1995 and 2005, per capita wheat consumption in Nigeria more than tripled, to 45 pounds, a year. Bread has been displacing traditional foods like eba, dumplings made from cassava root.

More than 25,000 people die from hunger or a related illness every day across the world.

The United Nations, having recorded more disappearances in Sri Lanka last year than in any other country, pressed to send human rights monitors, a proposal that the United States and many other countries supported. Rajapaksa's administration refused.

In 2005, 184,400 Americans admitted to drug treatment programs - roughly 10 percent of the total - were over 50, up from 143,000, or 8 percent of the total, in 2001.The same report, by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, foresees 4.4 million older substance abusers by 2020, compared with 1.7 million in 2001 - numbers that are "likely to swamp the current system," says Deborah Trunzo, who coordinates research for the agency.

Paul Virilio, the philosopher who revealed that speed is a phenomenon of modern life, said that quick movers will dominate slow movers.It is nature's law that if something can go fast it will. If we can do something faster, we will. In fact, we are.

The minimum wage in Britain will rise 3.8 percent to £5.73, or $11.34, an hour starting in October.

Christoph Büchel's legal battle becomes fodder for his art. A major underlying theme for Büchel is what he called "the creative economy," the way that, in his view, museums - particularly American ones - seem to care less about the art than they do about their image, budget, attendance and expansionist visions as they become ever more a part of an entertainment culture.

The number of children who die worldwide each year before the age of 5 has dropped below 10 million for the first time in recorded history - compared with 20 million annually in 1960 - Unicef noted in a report last month, "Child Survival." Now the goal is to cut the death toll to 4 million by 2015.Think about that accomplishment: The lives of 10 million children saved each year, 100 million lives per decade.To put it another way, the late James P. Grant, a little-known American aid worker who headed Unicef from 1980 to 1995 and launched the child survival revolution with vaccinations and diarrhea treatments, probably saved more lives than were destroyed by Hitler, Mao and Stalin combined.Paul Virilio, the philosopher who revealed that speed is a phenomenon of modern life, said that quick movers will dominate slow movers.

It is nature's law that if something can go fast it will. If we can do something faster, we will. In fact, we are.The minimum wage in Britain will rise 3.8 percent to £5.73, or $11.34, an hour starting in October.

Reproductive outsourcing is a new but rapidly expanding enterprise in India. Clinics that provide surrogate mothers for foreigners say they have been inundated with requests from the United States and Europe in recent months, as word spreads of India's combination of skilled medical professionals, relatively liberal laws and low prices.

As late as 1980 the U.S. Agency for International Development was still devoting 25 percent of its official development assistance to the modernization of farming, but today it is just 1 percent. Nearly 30 percent of World Bank lending once went to agricultural modernization, but now it is just 8 percent.

In Tuscany's poorer areas, whole towns are becoming depopulated and thousands of acres of agricultural land falling into disuse. The trend is particularly severe in the hilly land surronding the Monte Amita.

Nearly $100,000 went for party platters and groceries before the Iowa caucuses, even though the partying mood evaporated quickly. Rooms at the Bellagio luxury hotel in Las Vegas consumed more than $25,000; the Four Seasons, another $5,000. And top consultants collected about $5 million in January, a month of crucial expenses and tough fund-raising.The firm that includes Mark Penn, Clinton's chief strategist and pollster, and his team collected $3.8 million for fees and expenses in January; in total, including what the campaign still owes, the firm has billed more than $10 million for consulting, direct mail and other services, an amount other Democratic strategists who are not affiliated with either campaign called stunning.

The fact that 1 percent of the people in the world have 40 percent of the wealth, and 1 percent in the United States have about one-fifth, renders arguments about what "we" can afford absurd.

My husband and my children are my universe, but my parents are my North Star. I have lived abroad for a decade, moving to a new country as if it were a new state. "Home" for me remains the house that my grandfather built, which my mother and father still live in. My brothers and I know that even in the middle of the night we can come home and let ourselves in.

Of course the idealized vision of the incorruptible giRl-woman, which has been sampled add nauseam throughout the years, should surprise no one.And isn't innocence the ultimate fleeting moment - in other words, catnip for an industry perennially in search of the, well, moment? Needless to say, transgressive designers are most likely drawn to virtue because of the possibility of its being defiled. After all, even those most above suspicion can turn out to be as sweet as sour milk. The model Liya Kebede has made great strides for racial diversity in fashion. Now, she's starting Lemlem, a mostly hand-woven line of children's clothes made in Africa, in the hope that a younger crowd will embrace her multi-culti ideas. The outfits have an Ethiopian vibe with a New World ease. Finicky tots will approve.

Undercover video taken at the Westland/Hallmark Meat of Chino, California, shows workers shocking, kicking and shoving debilitated cattle with forklifts, prompting the government to pull 143 million pounds, or 65 million kilograms, of the company's beef.

A survey released this year by Defra, the British environment agency, found that 80 percent of people were concerned about climate change, and three quarters would be prepared to change their behavior "in some way" to limit climate change.But not in the ways that count most: Only 5 percent of car drivers said that they had driven less because of environmental concerns. Only 10 percent of people who had flown in the past year said that they would fly less this year because of climate-change concerns.

The Iraq Interior Ministry has ordered the police to round up beggars, vagabonds and mentally disabled people from the streets of Baghdad to prevent them from being used by insurgents as suicide bombers, The Associated Press reported Tuesday, citing a ministry spokesman.

A new report issued by the World Health Organization offers the first comprehensive analysis of tobacco use and control efforts in 179 countries. It notes that tobacco will kill more people this year than tuberculosis, AIDS and malaria combined. It warns that unless governments do more to slow the epidemic, tobacco could kill a billion people by the end of the century, the vast majority in poor and middle-income countries.

I have grown used to the idea that nearly everything around me in nature happens unobserved and unrecorded. A snowy winter sometimes retains a transcript, but even those are rare. The bills of animal mortality are almost completely invisible otherwise. Who thrives, who dies, there is no accounting at all, only the fact of thriving and dying.

Banerjee estimates, conservatively, that $15 billion a year out of roughly $100 billion in annual development aid worldwide could be spent on programs that have been proven to work. Unfortunately, the actual figure is much closer to zero than to $15 billion.

The top supermarket chains in the European Union are potentially "abusing" their market clout to drive down prices to suppliers and should be investigated, the European Parliament said on Monday.A small number of the largest supermarket chains including Tesco of Britain and Carrefour of France, were becoming "gatekeepers", controllling the access of farmers and other suppliers to consumers, the declaration said.It said evidence from accross the 27 EU member countries suggested that big supermarkets were abusing their buying power to force down prices paid to suppliers to "unsustainable" levels and impose unfair conditions on them."

I want my children and students to learn about a past with causes and effects. I do not want to send them forth armed only with emotion and confusion. I want them equipped with a secure and serene identity that permits them to recognize cruelty, injustice and falsehood and gives them the strength and patience to study, tolerate and defend the identities of others. They should know the difference between what has happened to them and what has happened to others.

In Tanzania alone, malaria kills about 100,000 people a year.

Most people in Shanghai seem to want the glory that comes with showing off a real iPhone to friends."My friends envy me a lot," said Pang, the Web designer. "They say, 'Wow, you can get an iPhone.' "

England's enduring class system can be aptly summed up in two words: public school. Those who attend English public schools - in reality expensive private schools - inherit a kind of right to rule. They learn how to survive in a world no less riven by competition and cruelty than society itself. After graduating, they can forever recognize one another. Even those who rebel are shaped by the experience. To be an English public schoolboy - yes, most are still boys - is to belong to a caste.

“We recognize tolerance as a basic component of democracy,” he said. “God has not created all of us alike — we are different — human society is a pluralistic society. In the Koran, God is telling us that man is created to be free. So we are free to think, and think different. So the aim of democracy is to recognize the pluralistic nature of human society. The second item is tolerance, I have to tolerate my opponent. With tolerance comes compromise; without compromise democracy doesn’t exist.”

"I had no idea about kidney transplants, but when they made me lie down on the stretcher, I was terrified," he said. "I knew that these people meant to do evil to me. When I woke up a doctor said my kidney had been removed. He said I would be shot if I ever told anyone what happened."

"I miss Yugoslavia," said Toha, a 33-year old Slovene entrepeneur.."We didn't have anything," he said. "Neighbours baked each other cakes; we had a leader we trusted. I remember my mother crying when Tito died. I was only 5, but I knew the world was about to change."

In the last five months alone, the [Brazilain] government says, 1,250 square miles, or 320,000 hectares, were lost.

The world's total meat supply was 71 million tons in 1961. In 2007, it was estimated to be 284 million tons. Per capita consumption has more than doubled over that period. (In the developing world, it rose twice as fast, doubling in the past 20 years.) World meat consumption is expected to double again by 2050, a projection that one expert, Henning Steinfeld of the United Nations, said was resulting in a "relentless growth in livestock production."...

Though some 800 million people now suffer from hunger or malnutrition, the majority of corn and soy grown in the world feeds cattle, pigs and chickens. This is the case in spite of the inherent inefficiencies: About two to five times more grain is required to produce the same amount of calories through livestock as through direct grain consumption, according to Rosamond Naylor, an associate professor of economics at Stanford University.

Under the stewardship of Dow Kim and Thomas Maheras, Merrill Lynch and Citigroup built positions in subprime-related securities that led to $34 billion in write-downs last year. The debacle cost chief executives their jobs and brought two of the world's premier financial institutions to their knees.In any other industry, Kim and Maheras would be pariahs. But in the looking-glass world of Wall Street, they — and others like them — are hot properties. The two executives are well on their way to reviving their careers, even as global markets shudder at the prospect that Merrill and Citigroup may report further subprime losses in the coming months. Maheras, who left his job as co-president of Citigroup's investment bank this fall after being demoted, has had serious discussions with several investment banks, including Bear Stearns, about taking on a top management position, people who have been briefed on the situation said. And he has also been approached by investment firms willing to back him to the tune of $1 billion or more if he decides to start his own hedge fund, these people said. Kim, who until last spring was a co-president at Merrill Lynch with oversight of the firm's trading and market operations, has been crisscrossing the globe in recent months raising money for his new hedge fund, Diamond Lake Capital.

On his blog, JSMineSet, Sinclair has told his readers that as much as $450 trillion worth of derivatives could disintegrate, leading to a far greater, and in some ways unpredictable, calamity...While the views of Sinclair , a gold bug who expects the price of gold to go up to $1,650, up from about $870 now, might be taken with a grain of salt, other experts have also begun to warn of the dire consequences of the credit market collapse.

Poverty in Britain doubled under Thatcher, and this figure has become permanent under New Labor. The share of the wealth, excluding housing, enjoyed by the bottom half of the population has fallen from 12 percent in 1976 to just 1 percent now. Thirteen million people now live in relative poverty.

Social mobility has declined to pre-war levels.The least able children from the richest 20 percent of the population now overtake the most able children from the bottom 20 percent by the age of seven.

Nearly half of the richest group go on to get university degrees while only 10 percent of the poorest manage to graduate.

Across Europe, politicians try to be culturally sensitive to Muslim citizens, who total 16 million, or 3 percent, of the 495 million people in the 27-member European Union, according to Central Institute Islam-Archives in Germany. In France, one in 10 inhabitants is Muslim, the highest proportion in the EU.

The average German or Japanese uses little more than half the energy consumed by an average American. In Germany and Japan, per-capita emissions of carbon dioxide spewed by cars, power plants and other sources of energy are half those in the United States. In France, they are a third.

The average price of regular gasoline in the United States has shot up to a record $3.28 a gallon...In Britain, gas at the pump costs around $7.70 a gallon, of which about $4.90 is taxes. In France, taxes account for about $4.60 of the retail price of $7.50 a gallon. (25/03/08)

Soaring prices for rice, a staple for nearly half the world's population, are already causing hardship across the developing world, particularly for urban workers.

Naeem Akhtar has an improbable role in the Indian government's drive to revitalize Kashmir after 18 years of militant violence. His task: rebrand this heavily militarized Himalayan region as a global golfing destination.

In 2001, scrap metal sold for $77 a ton; at the end of 2004, it was $300 per ton, and today it's approaching $480. Behind the rise, say the analysts, is China's voracious demand for steel.

The Pet Inn Royal hotel will unpack and microwave every packet of food that the master has carefully prepared - a common practice in Japan, where it is considered déclassé to serve pet food to a pet."Customers may ask, for example, to sprinkle cheese on top of the cooked rice meal, prepare milk at certain temperatures or give dessert," said Chiyo Sakurai, general manager of the hotel.

"It's a principle of art," Gnedovsky said. "The worse the conditions, the better the art." He sighed. "Artists should be hungry."What then to make of Gnedovsky's design for the company's new seven-story theater, open since January on the banks of the Moscow River? Do its marble lobby, spectacular views and large hall that seats 450 pose an artistic hazard for the scrappy company?Not to worry, Gnedovsky said. Before he drew up the plans, he studied everything that was wrong with the old theater. Then he reproduced it in the new one.

Each month, more than half of [the Somali] government's revenue, mostly from port taxes, disappears - stolen by "our people," the prime minister said.That leaves Nur with about $18 million a year in government money to run a failed state of nine million of some of the world's neediest, most collectively traumatized people.

Could a drug store sell two identical tubes of toothpaste, and charge 50 cents more for one of them? Of course not.But, in effect, exactly that has been happening - repeatedly and mysteriously - in markets that set prices in the United States for corn, soybeans and wheat. And even economists who have been studying this phenomenon say they are at a loss to explain it.Whatever the reason, the price for a bushel of grain established in the public derivatives markets has been substantially higher than the price of the same bushel of the same grain at the same moment in the cash market.

In February, India's ambassador to Bahrain, Balkrishna Shetty, sought a minimum monthly wage of $265 for all unskilled Indian workers, who are paid $160 to $225 a month there.

More than half of the water in China - the world's fourth-largest economy after the United States, Japan and Germany - is unfit to drink. Last year, around 48 million people living there lacked sufficient drinking water.

A virus called infectious salmon anemia, or ISA, is killing millions of salmon destined for export to Japan, Europe and the United States. The spreading plague has sent shivers through Chile's third-largest industry.

"All these problems are related to an underlying lack of sanitary controls," said Felipe Cabello, a microbiologist at New York Medical College in Valhalla that has studied Chile's fishing industry. "Parasitic infections, viral infections, fungal infections are all disseminated when the fish are stressed and the centers are too close together.""It is simply not possible to produce fish on an industrial scale in a sustainable way," said Wolfram Heise, director of the marine conservation program at the Pumalin Project, a private conservation initiative in Chile. "You will never get it into ecological balance."

In October 2006, Dr. Claudia Henschke of Weill Cornell Medical College jolted the cancer world with a study saying that 80 percent of lung cancer deaths could be prevented through widespread use of CT scans.Small print at the end of the study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, noted that it had been financed in part by a little-known charity called the Foundation for Lung Cancer: Early Detection, Prevention & Treatment. But a review of tax records by The New York Times shows that the foundation was underwritten almost entirely by $3.6 million in grants from the parent company of the Liggett Group, maker of Liggett Select, Eve, Grand Prix, Quest and Pyramid cigarette brands.

In what is one of the worst calamities to hit bat populations in the United States, on average 90 percent of the hibernating bats in four caves and mines in New York have died since last winter.Wildlife biologists fear a significant die-off in about 15 caves and mines in New York, as well as at sites in Massachusetts and Vermont. Whatever is killing the bats leaves them unusually thin and, in some cases, dotted with a white fungus. Bat experts fear that what they call White Nose Syndrome may spell doom for several species that keep insect pests under control.

If the world is going to sharply reduce the amount of carbon dioxide pumped into the atmosphere by midcentury, then many businesses will have to go carbon neutral, bringing their net emissions of the greenhouse gas to zero.But some could go even further by removing more CO2 than they produce. Instead of carbon neutral, how about carbon negative?

Outside Nha Trang, the beach town and port where my cruise ship is due after Danang, the Ana Mandara Six Senses Spa offers what its Web site calls "the ultimate seclusion," because it is only accessible by boat. The cost for a two-story villa, the only kind of accommodation, is in the neighborhood of $800 a night. My guidebook describes it as a magical place where dirt tracks between buildings give the illusion of a jungle village. But, clearly, it's an ersatz jungle. It's not Vietnam.

Botswana, one of Africa's wealthiest countries per capita thanks to diamonds, tourism and sensible management, has enjoyed more than four decades of honest, practical government under three popular presidents. On Monday, Mogae will give way to Vice President Ian Khama.Guided by Mogae and two other democratic presidents, the small country has flourished and become the envy of all of Africa. Despite high HIV numbers, its hospitals and clinics provide retroviral drugs to all sufferers. Its schools and universities provide increasing numbers of local and neighboring peoples with instruction.Rule of law is observed and corruption hardly exists. Botswana's secret is high quality leadership, broad levels of political participation, and extensive accountability.

"The foreign tourists don't go to the theater as much," she [Faith Hope Consolo, a chairwoman of the retail leasing and sles division of the New York estate company Prudential Douglas Elliman] said. "Their No. 1 pastime is shopping."

That's the condition of the small nation. It's a defense for everyone in the globalized world.""I think the goal of Czech mystification is to show us that we live in a world continually mystifying to us - the politicians, the advertisers."

"I had a certain fear of exposing myself too much in my work for a long time," he [Patrick Stewart] said. "A lot of what performing to me had been was elaborate, and at times quite clever, concealment. Someone once said of acting that it is 'telling beautiful lies,' and well, it became just no longer satisfactory to work that way."

"I miss Yugoslavia," said Toha, a 33-year old Slovene entrepeneur.."We didn't have anything," he said. "Neighbours baked each other cakes; we had a leader we trusted. I remember my mother crying when Tito died. I was only 5, but I knew the world was about to change."

The world's total meat supply was 71 million tons in 1961. In 2007, it was estimated to be 284 million tons. Per capita consumption has more than doubled over that period. (In the developing world, it rose twice as fast, doubling in the past 20 years.) World meat consumption is expected to double again by 2050, a projection that one expert, Henning Steinfeld of the United Nations, said was resulting in a "relentless growth in livestock production."...

Though some 800 million people now suffer from hunger or malnutrition, the majority of corn and soy grown in the world feeds cattle, pigs and chickens.

[In 2002] Saleh hit on an idea that he hoped would satisfy both his American and Islamist partners: "al hiwar al fikri," or intellectual dialogue. This was an effort to inculcate the idea that Islam, properly understood, does not condone terrorism.

[Paola Antonelli of MoMa] also believes that the yearning for privacy - or Existenzmaximum, as she calls it - will be an increasingly important issue for designers in the future.

The mainstream music industry is coming to recognize a price for a digital song that might be good enough to compete with the underground exchange of tunes on the Internet: free.

Eric Kastner, believed to have been Germany's last World War I veteran, died Jan. 1 in a nursing home in Cologne at the age of 107, his son, Peter Kastner, said.

Federal agents raided the Silk Roads Gallery in Los Angeles, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Pacific Asia Museum in Pasadena, the Bowers Museum in Santa Anna and Mingei International Museum in San Diego as part of a five-year investigation into the smuggling of looted antiquities from Thailand, Myanmar, China and Native American sites.

National Priorities Project, a research group that analyzes federal data, found that nearly 71 percent of army recruits graduated from high school in the 2007 budget year.The army's goal is 90 percent high school graduates, which it has not met since 2004.

Saudi Arabia supplies the United States with about 1.4 million barrels of crude oil a day, one-seventh of U.S. imports and second only to the 1.9 million barrels from Canada.

26,000 children still die every day from mostly preventable causes, Unicef noted. Four million infants die in their first month of life and up to half of these in their first day.

On his blog, JSMineSet, Sinclair has told his readers that as much as $450 trillion worth of derivatives could disintegrate, leading to a far greater, and in some ways unpredictable, calamity...

Poverty in Britain doubled under Thatcher, and this figure has become permanent under New Labor. The share of the wealth, excluding housing, enjoyed by the bottom half of the population has fallen from 12 percent in 1976 to just 1 percent now. Thirteen million people now live in relative poverty.

Social mobility has declined to pre-war levels.The least able children from the richest 20 percent of the population now overtake the most able children from the bottom 20 percent by the age of seven. Nearly half of the richest group go on to get university degrees while only 10 percent of the poorest manage to graduate.

Around 300,000 Afghan children cannot attend school because of violence in the country's other provinces, President Hamid Karzai told Parliament on its opening day Monday.The number of children unable to go to school is up by 50% from a year ago...

Iran has the second-largest natural gas reservoir in the world.

Earth's basic problem is that the Sun will gradually get larger and more luminous as it goes through life, according to widely held theories of stellar evolution. In its first 4.5 billion years, according to the models, the Sun has already grown about 40 percent brighter.Over the coming eons, life on Earth will become muggier and more uncomfortable and finally impossible.

Q.The world seems to be at some form of inflection point with a big shift in demand?A. Jeroen van der Veer, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell: The basic drivers are pretty easy and they are two fold. You go from six billion people to nine billion people, basically, in 2050. This combination of many more people climbing the energy ladder, which is basically welfare for a lot of people who live in poverty, creates that enormous demand for energy.

None of the 23 countries whose economies are dominated by ... "the exceptional curse of oil" are democracies.

Gotz Aly is the author of "Hitler's Beneficiaries: Plunder, Racial War and the Nazi Welfare State" in which he argued that ordinary Germans supported the Nazi regime not because they were inherently anti-Semitic, or blinded by Hitler's charisma, but for the relatively mundane reason that the Reich's policies raised their standard of living.

The most telling statistic in the World Economic Forum's latest Global Competitiveness Report is that not a single Arab state made the top 25.

In a survey of 55 hospitals financed by a World Bank project in Orissa, investigators "observed problems in 93 percent of them...India is the bank's largest borrower with 75 active projects worth a total commitment of $15.2 billion.

In only 80 years, Kenya's population had jumped from 2.9 million to 37 million. Had America grown at the same rate since 1928, when it had 120 million people, it would now have 1.56 billion citizens.

Kenya belongs to a group of some 40 countries that have extremely high population growth - rates of increase that I call "demographic armament." In a typical nation of this group, every 1000 males aged 40-44 are succeeded by at least 2,500 boys aged 0 to 4. In Kenya there are 4,190 boys.By contrast...Britain with just 677 boys between 0 and 4 replacing every 1,0000 males 40 to 44, in the category of "demographic capitulation."

Amongst the poorest 20 percent of the population, half are illiterate and barely 2 percent graduate from high school, according to [Indian] government data. By contrast, among the richest 20% of the population, nearly half are high school graduates and only 2 percent illiterate.

In a first, the majority of births in France last year were out of wedlock, the national statistics agency announced Tuesday..."What's led the rise in out-of-wedlock births is that a lifestyle that was once confined in Paris is now the norm even in rural areas. Marriage is no longer considered indispensable to form a family."

"What we need is a new narrative, a new 'we'. a multicolored, multicultural European identity," [Tariq Ramadan] said. "Immigration is a fact whether you like it or not. Europeans need to psychologically integrate that into their world view."

"Can you imagine Jesus ignoring the plight of the disenfranchised and downtrodden while going after the abortionist?" Scarborough wrote on the conservative Web site WorldNetDaily.com.

What do banks call it when a troubled borrower abandons her home, sending them the keys?"Jingle mail."

The coastal stock of bottom-dwelling fish is just a quarter of what it was 25 years ago. Already, scientists say, the sea's ecological balance has shifted as species lower on the food chain replace some above them.In Mauritania, lobsters vanished years ago. The catch of octopus - now the most valuable species - is four-fifths of what it should be. A 2002 study found that the most marketable fish off the coast of Senegal were close to collapse, essentially, sliding toward extinction."The sea is being emptied," said Moctar Ba, a consultant who formerly headed scientific research programs for Mauritania and West Africa. "The situation is very grave."

There are more than 2 million inmates in American prisons and jails, and some studies estimate that as many as 5 percent may be innocent.

An individual's life is itself a narrative with a beginning, a middle and at least the intimations of an end.

Sudan has seen war for all but 11 years since independence in 1956, with over two million dead; Somalia remains a failed state, too lawless for most aid agencies to work in; Congo's war has left five million dead; and northern Uganda was, until last year, ravaged by a millenarian cult known as the Lords Resistance Army, best known for mutilating villagers and abducting children as soldiers and sex slaves.

An annual income of $100,000 is enough for a comfortable life in Des Moines but barely enough to get by in New York City.

Eric Rognot, a longtime student of ice sheets at both poles for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said he hoped that the public and policymakers did not interpret the uncertainty in the 21st-century forecast as reason for complacency on the need to to limit risks by cutting emissions.Rignot recently proposed that unabated warming could result in three feet of global sea rise just from water flowing off Greenland, three feet from Antarctica and 18 inches as the remaining alpine glaciers shrivel away.

"We believe in a world where more than two billion people are entering the industrial age."BHP Billiton's CEO, Marius Kloppers, speaking to analysts when unveiling his bid for mining titan Rio Tinto in November, 2007.

"Status Despair"....the feeling when, say, the owner of a puny Gulfstream private jet takes in the sight of Prince Alaweed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia barrelling down the the runway in his flying palace, the customized double-decker A380 he had ordered from Airbus.Because the consumption stakes have been raised so high, more people in 2008 are likely to feel status despair, Evers said.Some, particularly in developed countries, will divert from the consumption-as-status pattern and seek consumer gratification in new ways - by counting the number of views on their page on the photo-sharing site Flickr, for instance.

'A PLACE IN THE AUVERGNE' by Ian Walthew (published in L'Express in French, 31/07/08)

Auvergnats always ask why you chose their ‘pays’, can’t understand how you could leave yours.

You don’t want to disappoint with the prosaic truth.

That you were searching for anywhere with a little land, south of an east-west axis traversing Lyon (the weather); more than 100 km from any airport that can take a Ryanair jet (to avoid their passengers).

Somewhere to hide from people talking about property prices, private schools and ‘plans for the weekend’.

That you were searching for a place where you could still smell the soil and the ‘fumier’ and the ‘cave’ on the clothes of your friends.

That you saw a house on the internet in a region called the Auvergne, a region you had never visited; that this house was too close to a RN, but the contours rolled well over the map, distant from the blue lines of autoroutes – you’d pass by this place on your way back to Paris from the south one day.

And we did.

People think they can find good houses, places, people. But you can’t. They find you. You set out, drift around, and wash up on a friendly shore.

Most people are scared of the open sea, the great expanse of the Auvergne, so they take the TGV to places they know, places where they have friends and acquaintances, places where they drop anchor with their urban determination to self-associate.

The Auvergne has no TGV, it’s poor. That’s why the people are so welcoming and hospitable, says my neighbor, Jean-Baptiste.

He’s 86 now, a retired ‘menusier’, the missing fingers to prove it. He speaks Oc, at the market – when it’s not too hot, too cold, too wet, too snowy, too foggy - when the ‘troisieme generation’ go down the mountain early in the morning to talk a lot and buy a little.

Rich people, rich places, they’re not so welcoming, they don’t give so much. Arms are held wide to greet you but the embrace never tightens.

My wife didn’t want to go too far south, to the land of two seasons and burnt, aching, brown grass. In the Auvergne, winter is long, but spring and autumn explode and implode in shades of colours too fleeting to paint; the summer is hot and languid, deserved by the trials of winter, not an easy given.

The Auvergnats like to think of themselves as reserved, cautious, private. They can’t show their endless curiosity about you, because here privacy is hallowed, so their questions are absurdly roundabout or so direct so as to appear unlike a question at all - more a statement of fact that you may wish to confirm or not. (I do, they don’t.)

But they do open up, and quicker than they like to acknowledge. They are a kind, warm people with a brusque façade but one which is easily chipped in the cold, melted in the heat of shared seasons.

How would you describe Auvergnats, Jean-Baptiste?‘There aren’t many of us left.’He pauses, sitting on a bench in his ‘potagère’, made of a piece of wood rested on two old oil drums, in the shade of June apple tree, green and hopeful. Reflecting. ‘Amoureux,’ he smiles.And their faults?‘We have none. No, one mustn’t exaggerate. Of course, I’m sure we do.’‘Such as?’He doesn’t like to say.

They’re not to be shared lightly, not with the readers of a magazine that Jean-Baptiste has only vaguely heard of, and certainly never read.

So this ‘foreigner’ (and here that word doesn’t mean coming from another nation) will tell you things you know but do not understand.

That ‘radinerie’ is a virtue, nothing is wasted. And you dare to speak of reducing consumption, of recycling and saving this planet.

That for the Auvergnats, land is an obsession: their willingness to argue over a 20 cm strip of useless ground; the story of a family picnic where two brothers end up fighting over who would sit under the shade of which of two trees.

So how did we get here? We stumbled, that’s the answer. Emotional refugees from a land of loss to the Auvergne, a place of endless discovery.

The EU and one arm of the government pours millions into the region to attract incomers like us, while another Minister closed the maternity ward and threatens Ambert hospital that brought us near this town, where our third child was born.

I asked Brice Hortefeux (when he was sent last year from a place called Paris to win over the bourgeoisie in the valley) why this was, why one hand could give so much while the other took away life, our future.

That’s a good question, he said.

(His suit looked very expensive in our marketplace, positively gleaming, his tie so fat and silky, his hair coiffured like a woman’s: that must be what they call ‘French flair’.)

So what’s the answer then?

His bodyguards hustled him away. He didn’t stay long.

The Auvergne: apparently a part of a country, ‘une et indivisible’. But I see no proof.

A place where the poor own their homes and their land, and have done for generations.

Where everyone has the right to build their own home on their own land, however ugly-pink and destructive to the Auvergne’s greatest asset – the ‘patrimoine’ that serves the tourists – and turn the roads leading to its towns into messy, elongated stains.

A place where Jean-Baptiste, the third generation of his family to live in his house, who has had three neighbouring families in his family’s life here, his place, greets an Anglo-Australian couple with two children and a removal fan from Brussels without missing a beat (nor when his dog kills our cat two days later, nor when our dog kills his chickens). Curious. Calm.

It was close to misery here; people got by on 3 or 4 cows. They ate beef only once a year, even the rich who could live well off 10-15 cows. The Fete du Pays, August 10th, a beef pot-au-feu.

We eat more beef now. There is little misery, not much money. But life in the Auvergne is a life apart: simple, straightforward, our table the farm food of ‘petits producteurs’ (still); clean air and cold water that slide off and out of primordial mountains; stories old and new, jokes, a small universe, an immense space of freedom.

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

'THE OLD SOLDIER IN THE HOSPITAL' by Ian Walthew (published in the IHT; 17th April 2008)

PUY-DE-DÔME, France: The world has turned, the markets have dropped, panic is in the air. I suppose.Here, in our mountain home, we are sick with flu, first me, then my wife. The weather is closed in.Down the mountain, at the hospital in town for my monthly treatment - because of a medical condition, they need to top up my gamma globulins every month - I sleep so deeply that two of my bottles are changed without Pascale, the nurse, stirring me.When I awake, I have a roommate. The Auvergnat is old, frail. I am English and 42 years old. Normally I have a room to myself.When I lived in Brussels, the day treatment ward was shiny and new - 16 reclining seats, facing each other. I used to take the same chair by the window, with its view of the power station.If you shared the same treatment rhythm as someone, you could see their steady improvement, or more often their gradual decline. Four hours, once a month, watching the person opposite fade. Never did we speak.Here they closed the maternity ward, but the hospital remains open; two beds a room, a view of the church and the hills above. And people speak to each other.We strike up a conversation and I discover that my roommate shares the family name of one of the masons working at our house.In these parts it is a common name. Despite this, he knows the mason, and his father and mother, and where he lives and how their families are related.Monsieur Beal has had six operations in as many years. He used to weigh 86 kilograms, now he weighs just 48 kilograms, 106 pounds. He has had a kidney removed, and half his pancreas, if I hear him right, and more, too.When I ask if I might take his picture he stands tall, like the soldier he was. He did his military service in the elite para commandos under the command of an infamous colonel.Monsieur Beal did 26 combat drops in Algeria, mostly intercepting rebels on the Tunisian and Moroccan borders.When not fighting, he was the colonel's driver: "It was like that. At base we were drivers or cooks, but when we jumped we were all the same."The colonel? "He was a great man. For his 40th birthday, he gave the entire regiment leave and we drank so much beer, we purged our bodies of the desert through every orifice."What happened to the colonel? "He was captured at Dien Bien Phu, but he escaped, pretending to collapse, while crossing a single file wooden bridge, into a crocodile filled river."Monsieur Beal likes the English. His regiment was deployed from Algeria to Cyprus. They weren't told why until a few days before the operation, but it was for the drop on the bridges over the Suez Canal, south of Port Said."We had the easy bit, we French only had a couple of regiments to spare, everyone else was in Algeria."Resistance was low. The enemy soldiers weren't soldiers, just men conscripted at the last minute, without shoes, without rifles. A few nests of resistance, some pill-boxes, it was over very quickly. We found piles of abandoned helmets that could fill this room. The Israelis had destroyed the Egyptian Air Force; it was all done before we dropped."On sentry duty at the canal, the English guards never took out a pack of cigarettes without offering one of their fine smokes to us French - the French Army gave us straw to smoke. And the English always poured us hot tea, with milk, without asking. With Egyptian honey for sugar. They were good men."In Cyprus, Monsieur Beal and his fellow soldiers were given a tour of a British warship. As they went down the gangplank afterwards, each of them were handed a cornet of frites - not a little thing, like an ice cream, but a great big bag, hot and steaming. They were the best frites he had ever eaten. He never forgot those frites.The last poilu - the last French World War I infantryman - is dead. Now it is the men of Indochina and Algeria we shall speak of.Why is the past always more interesting to me than the present? Why is the heard more rich than the read?Twenty-six combat drops. Suez. The colonel.The colonel is still alive. And so is Monsieur Beal, next to me in a hospital bed in the Auvergne.

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

'THE BOOKS WE GET TO READ....AND WHY' by Debbie Frost.

I’m not a journalist or a writer, and I don’t want to be. I didn’t last month and after a slow and illuminating journey up & over my latest learning curve I definitely don’t want to be this month or any other month. So I’m just Mrs Average who probably reads a lot. Recently I read a wonderful book, not an unusual experience but believe me this one was genuinely and unusually excellent; “A Place in my Country” by Ian Walthew. I can recommend it to you – warm, funny, insightful, informative, sad, thought provoking and enlightening. I could go on but read it for yourself…

Occasionally when I have read a particularly good book I track down the author’s website and drop them a note of thanks and encouragement to continue. When I wrote to Ian Walthew he wrote back – a first I think for me. He began by saying he had had a very difficult time with his publisher, so difficult in fact he was thinking of “not writing another book”. How could this crazy state of affairs come about? This is a précised version of some of the things he told me plus some additional bits and pieces I have subsequently established for myself, all of which are a total revelation, and probably would be to any of the British reading public – so why don’t we know this, and why aren’t the newspapers telling us?

I think all of us who read regularly recognise how hard it is for a first time non-celebrity author to break through into ‘the big time’ unless they somehow get picked up by Richard & Judy or get ‘scaled out’ in a large retail or well known internet outlet. But this is where it gets interesting – ‘scaled out’ means the publisher actually pays to have the authors’ book on the 3 for 2 tables. They do this by giving the retailers a discount – so leaving even less money for the authors – and by paying what some retailers call an ‘administrative charge’. For example, to be in a large book retailers window in London can, I understand, cost the publishers as much as £25,000 each week.

So, how does the 3 for 2 pile work – and, perhaps almost as important, have we ever thought about it before? Two thirds, more or less, of the table is devoted to big name or well known authors we are likely to buy anyway. The 3rd ‘third’ is then used for books that the publishers need to have there but which the retailer might not under normal circumstances have taken in large volume, perhaps because the book is by an unknown or relatively unknown author. According to a recent article in The Author being on the 3 for 2 pile can increase sales by a staggering 5,000%.

We, the book buyers go into the store, buy our two books from authors we like to follow and are then “teased” [that’s the polite word for it] into taking a browse through the books we don’t know because that third book will be, effectively, ‘free’.

But who do the publishers want to get on the 3 for 2 tables? Firstly good, big name, big selling authors but surprisingly [although perhaps not when you think about it] secondly, books they have paid a lot of money to acquire in the first place - in order to earn back the big advance. So the publishers aren’t necessarily, or even at all, pushing the books that have received the best reader reaction and the best reviews. In fact sometimes quite the opposite; they are pushing and paying the retailers to push, the books they need to earn their money back on, even if the book sold badly in paperback and was terribly reviewed.

For first time, or even second and third time authors who are paid very modest advances [which generally publishers earn back from hardback sales], it is virtually impossible to ‘get out there’ and so come to the attention of the book buying public like you and I.

If we condone this we are effectively allowing publishers and the big companies to control the books that get read by us, the wider public.

Are we are being spoon fed by the corporate publishing world without even knowing it… And, if so, what can we do about it?

By the way, on the subject of Richard & Judy’s Book Club there was a very informative article by Ciar Byrne in the Home section of the Independent on 7th June which you can still read on line at www.independent.co.uk/arts It goes into some detail about how the list is compiled, how influential the list has become and the problems this is creating for independent publishers and authors. The headline “Winners of the Literary Lottery..” says it all.

Having established how the 3 for 2 pile works, plus the internet equivalent and learnt a bit more about Richard & Judy’s list, it set me thinking – what else, where else, can we find out about ‘new’ books and ‘new’ authors. How about the review section of the weekend papers, a favourite place of mine..

More research later I now realise how incredibly difficult it is for authors to get reviewed in the national papers without some sort of personal contact with the literary editors or at least knowing a journalist on one of the papers who may bring their book to the right persons attention. So the books you see reviewed are not necessarily based on the quality or importance of the book but a whole range of other factors that are possibly at play; the quid pro quo, the friend of a friend, the old boy network or even perhaps, horror of horrors ‘revenge’ – the author of book X is also a reviewer who did a particularly critical review of the reviewers own book [are you still with me here..] and they want to get their own back!

If we relate this back to the 3 for 2 table and the relevance of the ‘big advance’, the first time non-celeb author, without a big advance bidding war behind them and therefore with limited publisher support and with no friends of friends contacts, has next to no chance of getting reviewed. However good the book…

And please bear in mind I am not even talking about how difficult it is for an author to find an agent or a publisher as a first time author in the current celeb driven memoir market – Katie Price, Jordan’s first piece of possibly ghost written fiction was the best selling fiction book in the UK in 2007. What does that say about us, the book buying public?

The final blow to my previously naive assumption that the review sections of the weekend nationals would be full of genuine attempts by the literary editors to bring to our attention worthwhile good books came when I realised the increasing power of The Famous.

Say publisher X has paid a fortune for the new book by a Very Famous Y – and, at roughly the same time, the features editors of all the Nationals will be dying to get an exclusive interview with him/her. So what the publishing PR people effectively say, in the nicest most subtle way, is ‘Look, if we give you an exclusive interview with Y this week then next week the quid pro quo is you give a big review to this first time author who we paid a fortune to because of a bidding war and we need to earn our money back’.

Add to this the limitations of space within which all literary editors are working, the obligations they have to review big name authors and the remaining space being used up by unspoken understandings and obligations to the PR people you can see how little genuine space there must be for first time authors.

Disillusioning isn’t it. Are we being spoon fed reviews based on the publishers commercial imperatives in return for the commercial imperatives of the national newspapers?

It seems to me that the entire book review infrastructure is profoundly flawed. Could it even be interpreted as intellectually bereft and perhaps lacking in integrity – and, surely, there is a better way?

Could ‘the better way’ be via one of the big online retailers? More research, more concerns, more disillusion later - did I know that one of the big .co.uk retailers is currently applying pressure on some large publishing groups to give them even better commercial terms than they currently receive – and how do they do this? By removing the Buy Button from some of the publisher’s books and removing some of their titles from promotions such as ‘Perfect Partners’ and ‘Recommendations for You’. And this when we have already established that large British book retailers, high street or web based, receive generous terms from publishers giving them already a large percentage of the available profit.

These sorts of sanctions are unlikely to hurt the publishers but they should surely effect reputations built on choice and recommendations to customers when their current actions represent reduced choice and distorted recommendations. But only if we know about their actions in the first place, only if we can read it or hear it for ourselves, only if we are told about it by the newspapers and other media can we make informed considered decisions.

And so to my conclusions – serious book lovers have to be very clever and very resourceful to find the best new books out there, and once we have chanced upon a brilliant new book, a new author like Ian Walthew, the single most important thing we can do, knowing everything we now know about the system and its potential to manipulate us, is tell everyone – use the power of the internet and the power of personal recommendation. Get clever in finding different, unbiased sources of new books and authors and recommend them to your friends, your family and even that bloke you see on the 7.45 train to work each morning. We need to be informed – and we need to use the power that information gives us.

In that spirit of recommendation my personal favourite source at the moment is a website run by two woman in Yorkshire & Devon; they aren’t part of the literary scene, have no features or exclusives to organise, no actual or metaphysical debts to pay and aren’t authors themselves. The reviews are written by book lovers and readers like you and I, who aren’t paid and have no vested interests in any specific book. Have a look at www.thebookbag.co.uk and when you’ve done that in return let me know your favourite places for unbiased, interesting, informed and intelligent recommendations or reviews.

Weidenfeld & Nicolson, hardback 2007; Phoenix paperback, 2008

LIFE

Bipartisan Study Finds Insufficient Laboratory Safeguards, Loose RegulationBy Joby WarrickWashington Post Staff Writer Sunday, November 30, 2008; Page A03Seven years after the 2001 anthrax attacks, a congressionally ordered study finds a growing threat of biological terrorism and calls for aggressive defenses on par with those used to prevent a terrorist nuclear detonation.Due for release next week, a draft of the study warns that future bioterrorists may use new technology to make synthetic versions of killers such as Ebola, or genetically modified germs designed to resist ordinary vaccines and antibiotics.The bipartisan report faults the Bush administration for devoting insufficient resources to prevent an attack and says U.S. policies have at times impeded international biodefense efforts while promoting the rapid growth of a network of domestic laboratories possessing the world's most dangerous pathogens.The number of such "high-containment" labs in the United States has tripled since 2001, yet U.S. officials have not implemented adequate safeguards to prevent deadly germs from being stolen or accidentally released, it says. "The rapid growth in the number of such labs in recent years has created new safety and security risks which must be managed," the draft report states.The report is the product of a six-month study by the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction and Terrorism, which Congress created last spring in keeping with one of the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission. Drafts of chapters pertaining to bioterrorism were obtained by The Washington Post.The document cites progress in many areas of biodefense since the deadly anthrax attacks of 2001, including major investments in research, stockpiling of drugs and development of a network of sensors designed to detect airborne viruses and bacteria. The Bush administration has spent more than $20 billion on such countermeasures, far more than any of its predecessors.But the report says the next administration must do much more to prevent dangerous pathogens from falling into the wrong hands in the first place. While politicians often warn about the dangers of nuclear terrorism, a serious biological attack would be easier to accomplish and deserves a top priority, it says."The more probable threat of bioterrorism should be put on equal footing with the more devastating threat of nuclear terrorism," the draft states. It calls on the Obama administration to develop a comprehensive approach to preventing bioterrorism and to "banish the 'too-hard-to-do' mentality that has hobbled previous efforts." Some bioweapons specialists have argued that it is practically impossible to prevent a biological attack, because lethal strains of anthrax bacteria and other deadly microbes can be found in nature. But the report argues that it would be far easier for bioterrorists to obtain the seeds of an attack from laboratories that have ready supplies of "hot" strains. U.S. officials think an Army biodefense lab was the source of the anthrax spores used in the 2001 attacks that killed five people.The biodefense research industry that sprang up after 2001 offers potential solutions to a future attack, but also numerous new opportunities for theft or diversion of deadly germs, the report says. Today, about 400 research facilities and 14,000 people are authorized to work with deadly strains in the United States alone, and several of the new labs have been embroiled in controversies because of security breaches, such as the escape of lab animals.No single government agency has authority to oversee security at these U.S. labs, most of which are run by private companies or universities. Such facilities in the United States "are not regulated" unless they obtain government funding or acquire pathogens from the government's list of known biowarfare agents. Because of this gap, labs can work with "dangerous but unlisted pathogens, such as the SARS virus," which causes severe acute respiratory syndrome, without the government's knowledge.Internationally, the challenges are even greater. While the U.S. government continues to spend billions of dollars to secure Cold-War-era nuclear stockpiles, similar efforts to dismantle Soviet bioweapons facilities have been scaled back because of disagreements with the Russian government, the report notes. The only global treaty that outlaws the development of biological weapons has no mechanism for inspections or enforcement. Efforts to strengthen the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention were dealt a symbolic blow in 2001 when the Bush administration withdrew its support for a new accord that had been under negotiation for six years.Meanwhile, the growth in biodefense research seen in the United States has spread to dozens of countries, including developing nations such as Malaysia and Cuba that are investing heavily to develop world-class biotech industries. One of the fastest-growing technologies is DNA synthesis, which offers new capabilities to alter the genes of existing pathogens or synthesize them artificially. While governments, trade groups and professional organizations are experimenting with various voluntary controls over such new capabilities, the United States should lead a global effort to strengthen oversight and clamp down on the unregulated export of deadly microbes, the panel said."Rapid scientific advances and the global spread of biotechnology equipment and know-how are currently outpacing the modest international attempts to promote biosecurity," the report says.http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/29/AR2008112901921.html

By Joby WarrickWashington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, December 2, 2008; Page A02The odds that terrorists will soon strike a major city with weapons of mass destruction are now better than even, a bipartisan congressionally mandated task force concludes in a draft study that warns of growing threats from rogue states, nuclear smuggling networks and the spread of atomic know-how in the developing world.The sobering assessment of such threats, due for release as early as today, singled out Pakistan as a grave concern because of its terrorist networks, history of instability and arsenal of several dozen nuclear warheads. The report urged the incoming Obama administration to take "decisive action" to reduce the likelihood of a devastating attack."No mission could be timelier," says the draft report of the Commission on the Prevention of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation and Terrorism, which spent six months preparing an assessment for Congress and the new president-elect. It adds: "In our judgment, America's margin of safety is shrinking, not growing."The report, ordered by Congress last year, concludes that terrorists are more likely to obtain materials for a biological attack than to buy or steal nuclear weapons. But it says the nuclear threat is growing rapidly, in part because of the increasing global supply of nuclear material and technology. Without greater urgency and decisive action by the world community, it is more likely than not that a weapon of mass destruction will be used in a terrorist attack somewhere in the world by the end of 2013," says the draft report, a copy of which was obtained by The Washington Post. The Post reported excerpts from an earlier draft in Sunday's editions.The creation of the commission, chaired by former senator Bob Graham (D-Fla.), with former congressman James M. Talent (R-Mo.) serving as vice chairman, was one of the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, which explored the causes of the 2001 terrorist attacks against the United States. The new panel's bipartisan members and staff conducted more than 260 interviews with government officials and experts around the world to assess the problem of weapons of mass destruction as well as offer proposals for reducing the threat.While the panel found the risk of an attack with such weapons to be increasingly serious, "nuclear terrorism is still a preventable catastrophe," the report says. It calls for aggressive steps to secure unguarded stockpiles of nuclear weapons material such as uranium and plutonium, as well as coordinated international efforts to discover and disrupt smuggling rings that traffic in atomic technology.It also urges a dramatic overhaul of the international institutions and treaties that have sought to slow the spread of nuclear weapons since the 1950s. The landmark Non-Proliferation Treaty should be dramatically toughened, the report recommends, with the addition of real penalties for violators and a more robust International Atomic Energy Agency to carry out inspections and enforce the rules.The United States should push for a global consensus banning states such as Iran and North Korea from adding to their stockpiles of enriched uranium and plutonium, while also ensuring supplies of commercial reactor fuel for countries that renounce nuclear weapons, the report says.Commission members urged Barack Obama to take a tough line with both Iran and North Korea. If the president-elect seeks to engage the two countries diplomatically, they said, he should do so "from a position of strength, emphasizing both the benefits of them abandoning their nuclear programs and the enormous costs of failing to do so." Nuclear weapons in the hands of either regime not only pose a threat in their own right but also increase the chances of a destabilizing arms race, the report says.Pakistan's buildup of nuclear arms also threatens to exacerbate a regional arms race, while presenting opportunities for terrorists to acquire weapons parts and critical technology, the commissioners concluded."Pakistan is our ally, but there is a grave danger it could also be an unwitting source of a terrorist attack on the United States -- possibly with weapons of mass destruction," the report says. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/01/AR2008120102710.html?sub=new